Researchers are known to conduct many experiments and research firms, both on Earth and in space. Some people were able to walk on the moon, but, so to speak, a man named Eugene Shoemaker was buried on the moon.

The careful researcher was a geologist and one of the pioneers of planetary science. He was faithful to the mission of exploring the moon with various impact holes and provided additional support under the command of American space explorers.

In any case, he could think of the moon far away, despite his fragmentary fantasies about its appearance. He was a candidate for Apollo’s lunar voyage, and although he was the most important geologist on the moon at the time, he was never elected. He was diagnosed with Addison’s disease and adrenal insufficiency.

He worked as part of US space operations, counted monthly Apollo missions, and directed Apollo space travel near the hole. It took the shoemaker a long time to find the impact holes buried all over the ground. To his surprise, he had a car accident. At his recent death, he realized that the saddest thing about his life was not being able to gain weight per month.

His body was burned to death, and his remains of fire were sent to the moon in capsules long after the lunar miners’ space missions ended. His remains were placed in polycarbonate capsules and sent to the moon to record the date of his birth and death. Meanwhile, the spacecraft deliberately collided with the lunar surface where the shoemaker’s skull was found.

His crowns were scattered over the south pole of the moon, causing him to be buried there. Do you really admit that the demand was enough to bury him on the moon? Tell us what you think about this. Sign up for this account for more information.

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