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"I'm strictly an ivory-tower person. I can explain things but I can't do things."
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This novel is famously concerned with the dust on the surface of the Moon - sometimes referred to as lunar soil to distinguish it from the chunkier forms of lunar regolith.
Planetary scientists fretted in the 1960's that a space ship landing on the Moon might actually disappear into the dust covering the surface.
This device is similar to a jet-ski, but for that lunar powder. Robert Heinlein wrote about the idea of skis for lunar powder by analogy to snow skis; see the entry for moon skis from his 1939 novel Requiem. Comment/Join this discussion ( 0 ) | RSS/XML | Blog This | Additional
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Science Fiction
Timeline
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'...the rocket’s landing-arms automatically unfolded.'
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'...points and patches of light... sliding all over their faces in a programmed manner that had been designed to foil facial recognition systems.'
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'...the combined Wind-Suncatcher, like a spray of tulips mounted fanwise.'
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'I went to the control room where the three other men were manipulating their mechanical men.'
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'The low-slung monorail car, straddling its single track, bored through the shadows on a slowly rising course.'
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'... he thrust in his charging arm to replenish his store of energy.'
Skip Movewear Arc'teryx AI Pants
'...the terrible Jovian gravity that made each movement an effort.'
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