Specials

  • On 20 July 1969, NASA's Apollo programme landed a man on the Moon, less than a decade after President John F Kennedy announced the goal to Congress. On the 40th anniversary of that milestone, Nature looks at the legacy of the Apollo missions and their influence on lunar science, as well as prospects for future manned missions that could see humans once again set foot on the Moon.

  • Interactive

  • Galleries

      • A slideshow of eye-catching photographs from the Apollo missions.
      • 19 June 2009
      • How was the moon formed? Why is it a funny shape? And what's that orange soil made of?
  • Briefings

  • Interviews

      • Harrison Schmitt was the first and last scientist to touch the lunar surface.
      • 16 July 2009
      • Astronaut Alan Bean stepped down onto the lunar surface during the 1969 Apollo 12 mission, but left NASA in 1981 to devote himself to painting. He tells Nature how he attempts to convey his lunar experience through his work.
      • 31 December 2008
  • News and Features

      • The Apollo programme inspired thousands of people to pursue careers in science. Today, they still support human spacefaring & but baulk at the price. Richard Monastersky reports on the results of a Nature poll.
      • 15 July 2009
  • Opinion

      • Giovanni Bignami reflects on the people who persuaded him that we must send humans beyond Earth's orbit to inspire public and political support for science.
      • 15 July 2009
      • The cold war saw governments develop international policies to regulate outer space for military and civil uses. Loopholes in those policies must now be closed, writes Roald Sagdeev.
      • 15 July 2009
      • Jeff Kanipe reviews The Seventh Landing: Going Back to the Moon, This Time to Stay by Michael Carroll
      • 15 July 2009
      • The anniversary of the first footstep on the Moon is being celebrated in an array of new books.
      • 15 July 2009
  • From the Archives

  • Twitter & Blog

      • Nature News retrospectively tweets the Apollo 11 Moon landing in 'real time' 40 years later.
      • More on the Moon landings with blog posts to accompany our Apolloplus40 tweets.

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