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![[Ranger VII] FIRST LUNAR IMPACT: captured by the first spacecraft to photograph another world up close NASA, 31 July 1964 image 1](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25639331-40-1.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
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Ranger VII photographed its way down to its target in a lunar plain named Mare Cognitum (the Known Sea). The landing site was south of the Crater Copernicus, at latitude 10.35°S and longitude 20.58°W. The probe sent pictures from six cameras to waiting scientists, engineers, and astronomers, who "were delighted at the clarity of the images which confirmed that there were lunar areas topographically suitable for manned landing sites" (Cortright, p. 46).
The Ranger VII lunar lander was the first true success in the United States' early quest to explore the Moon. It heralded a new era of exploration, one that saw dramatically more mission successes than failures. The images, which showed the lunar surface in stunning detail, were a harbinger of future human exploration of the Moon.
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CLICK HERE: Ranger 7
Literature
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC, November 1964, pp. 699-700