Apollo moon rocket engines recovered
- 1/9
Apollo Moon Rocket Engines Raised from Seafloor by Amazon CEO
Bezos Expeditions - 2/9
Apollo Moon Rocket Engines Raised from Seafloor by Amazon CEO
Bezos Expeditions - 3/9
Blast from the Past: NASA Fires Historic Engine Parts for New Rocket
NASA - 4/9
10 Most Amazing Flying Machines Ever
NASA - 5/9
Gunshots Damage Historic Saturn V Moon Rocket
collectSPACE.com / Jon Meek - 6/9
Jesco von Puttkamer, Von Braun Rocket Team Member, Dies at 79
NASA - 7/9
FILE - In this July 16, 1969 file photo provided by NASA, the Saturn V rocket that launched Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins on their Apollo 11 moon mission lifts off at Cape Kennedy, Fla. For more than four decades, the powerful engines that helped boost the Apollo 11 mission to the moon have rested in the Atlantic. Now Internet billionaire and space enthusiast Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon.com, wants to raise at least one of them to the surface. (AP Photo/NASA, File)
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This 1963 photo provided by NASA shows an F-1 Engine for the Saturn V S-IC (first) stage at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. An undersea expedition spearheaded by Amazon.com CEO and founder Jeff Bezos used sonar to find what he said were the F-1 engines that helped boost the Apollo 11 mission on July 16, 1969 located 14,000 feet deep in the Atlantic. In an online announcement Wednesday, Bezos said he is drawing up plans to recover the sunken engines, part of the mighty Saturn V rocket that launched Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins on their moon mission. (AP Photo/NASA)
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FILE - In this file photo made May 25, 2010, Amazon.com Inc. CEO and founder Jeff Bezos speaks during the company's shareholders meeting in Seattle. An undersea expedition spearheaded by Bezos used sonar to find what he said were the F-1 engines that helped boost the Apollo 11 mission to the moon located 14,000 feet deep in the Atlantic. In an online announcement Wednesday, March 28, 2012, the Amazon.com CEO and founder said he is drawing up plans to recover the sunken engines, part of the mighty Saturn V rocket that launched Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins on their moon mission. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File)