NASA's Artemis II: First Crewed Moon Flight in 53 Years
In the vast realm of NASA space exploration , one mission stands out as humanity’s boldest step forward — and backward in time. NASA is preparing for the Artemis II mission , the first crewed lunar flyby since Apollo 17 in 1972. After 53 years, we are once again venturing into the unknown with living astronauts aboard the most powerful rocket ever built. This is not just a flight — it is lunar exploration reborn. Why now? How will it happen? Who will fly? And what does it mean for our future? Let’s dive deep into the facts, the dreams, and the dollars behind this historic journey. ( Read more inspiring stories about our natural world and cosmos on NaturalWorld50 Blog ) Back to the Past: Why We Left the Moon in 1972 December 14, 1972. Apollo 17 commander Eugene Cernan took one final step on the lunar surface and said, “We leave as we came… but with the hope that someday… man will return.” For over five decades, that hope remained just a dream. Budget cuts, shifting priorities, an...