A common error in documentaries nowadays is to show Armstrong jumping down to the footpad and then saying, "That's one small step...", some time before he actually stepped onto the moon.
Of course, there was less action in the step, so I guess that's why they prefer the jump. The earliest I know of it being done was in the movie
For All Mankind, 1989.
Anyway, back to the subject, I just had to check a few things, such as details about the Genesis Rock, and put a few finishing touches to Part 10, so here it is in full:
From the Earth to the Moon — Part 10 — Galileo Was Right0:00:00 ## 1 — "The time to step things up"
0:02:05 ## Tom Hanks — Introduction
0:02:51 ## Part Ten — Galileo Was Right
0:03:04 ## Full moon rising in the northern hemisphere
0:03:17 ## Credits
0:03:31 ## Gibbous moon
0:03:41 ## Credits continued
0:04:01 ## Moon from space
0:04:07 ## Dave Scott, Jim Irwin and the lunar rover
0:04:18 ## Credits continued
0:04:28 ## Rock tongs
0:04:36 ## Twinning
0:04:38 ## Dave Scott: Guess what we just found.
0:04:52 ## Mineralogy lecture, April 1969 — Apollo 15 prime and back-up crews
0:04:56 ## Vance DeVoe Brand, Apollo 15 Backup Command Module Pilot
0:04:58 ## James Benson Irwin, Apollo 15 Lunar Module Pilot
0:05:02 ## Richard Francis (Dick) Gordon Jr, Apollo 15 Backup Commander
0:05:03 ## Alfred Merrill Worden, Apollo 15 Command Module Pilot
0:05:09 ## Geology Professor
0:05:19 ## David Randolph Scott, Apollo 15 Commander
0:05:23 ## Harrison Hagan (Jack) Schmitt, Apollo 15 Backup Lunar Module Pilot
0:05:34 ## Dr Ray Pemberton
0:05:40 ## Deke Slayton
0:06:25 ## Jack Schmitt: Find a teacher who can bring out the scientific mind in all of them.
0:06:34 ## California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California
0:07:12 ## Dr Leon Silver
0:08:23 ## Lee Silver: Until Apollo 18, may I recommend robots for gathering samples? Cheaper, safer, and the good ones have very small egos.
0:09:38 ## 2 — The mystery of the dead cat
0:09:48 ## Orocopia Mountains, California, May 1970
0:09:55 ## Jack Schmitt
0:09:56 ## Jim Irwin
0:09:57 ## Dick Gordon
0:09:59 ## Dave Scott
0:10:23 ## Lee Silver: The Orocopias, gentlemen.
0:10:40 ## Lee Silver: This is Disneyland to a field geologist. Up here it's
all about context.
0:12:09 ## Lee Silver: There's a story here. A story about what happened to this area.
0:13:53 ## Lee Silver: From 240,000 miles away, you have to give the most complete possible description of what you're seeing. Not just which rocks you plan to bring back, but their context. That, and knowing which ones to pick up in the first place, is what might separate you guys from those little robots. You know, the ones some jaded soul thinks should have your job.
0:15:41 ## Lee Silver: Thanks to the data coming out of NASA over the last five years we have some idea of the moon's age, its chemical composition, but as for its genesis, we're still in the dark.
0:16:40 ## The brain of Farouk El-Baz
0:16:49 ## Al Worden
0:16:52 ## Dr Farouk El-Baz
0:19:07 ## San Juan Mountains, Colorado, August 1970
0:19:14 ## The suite
0:22:21 ## 3 — The big picture
0:23:53 ## Deke Slayton: They've cancelled Apollo 18 and 19.
0:24:34 ## Buell Park, Arizona, September 1970
0:25:53 ## Dave Scott: To the right there's a lot of dirt, with green stuff sloping down.
0:26:34 ## Dave Scott: At my four o'clock is a large block of granite on the top of the hill which contains at least four vertical dykes protruding out to the uplift. [Dyke — a wall-like mass of igneous rock intruded into cracks in older sedimentary rock. Dave was learning.]
0:27:11 ## Lee Silver. Yeah. He's cookin'.
0:27:17 ## Dave Scott: Well, first of all, we have this idea for a stand-up EVA right after landing.
0:28:22 ## Dave Scott: With the new shorter rendezvous, maybe we could trade some abort propellant.
0:28:26 ## Deke Slayton: Abort propellant? For a rake?
0:28:31 ## Dave Scott: A rake
and a lens.
0:28:36 ## Deke Slayton: Uh-huh.
0:28:42 ## Flagstaff, Arizona, July 1970
0:28:48 ## Farouk El-Baz: There, the big picture, Al. You must tell me the big picture first.
0:28:52 ## Al Worden: Well, there's...
0:28:54 ## Farouk El-Baz: Quickly!
0:28:55 ## Al Worden: Basalt lava flows...
0:28:56 ## Farouk El-Baz: No, no, too specific. The big picture first.
0:28:59 ## Al Worden: Cinder cones, lots of lava.
0:29:02 ## Farouk El-Baz: From where is the lava flowing?
0:29:04 ## Al Worden: Damn! I don't know.
0:29:06 ## Farouk El-Baz: There's a breach in the cone. You see?
0:29:10 ## Al Worden: I cant!
0:29:11 ## Farouk El-Baz: Of course not. We've passed it already.
0:29:23 ## The exploring of beautiful places
0:29:34 ## Rocco Petrone, Apollo Program Director
0:29:44 ## Heated debate — Marius Hills or Hadley-Apennine
0:30:13 ## Chester Lee
0:30:17 ## Stan Blaisdell
0:30:27 ## Ken Jason
0:34:04 ## 4 — "You're ready"
0:34:04 ## Kapoho, Hawaii, December 1970
0:35:18 ## Farouk El-Baz: You've become as crazy as me!
0:35:24 ## Partying
0:35:44 ## Error: Photo of Hadley Rille is flipped horizontally and rotated 90 degrees anticlockwise.
0:36:42 ## Lee Silver: But what we'd really like to find is this. Anorthosite. And it's important, because it may unlock a stack of mysteries about the origins of the moon, because if you find this, you have probably found a piece of the moon's primordial crust. It would be a shame if it was up there and we missed it.
0:37:13 ## July 31, 1971 8:29am CDT
0:37:19 ## Mission Control Geology Backroom
0:37:28 ## 5 — The plain at Hadley Apennine
0:37:36 ## Stand-up EVA
0:37:44 ## Dave Scott: Let's see if we can give our friends in the Geology Backroom something to get excited about.
0:38:39 ## CapCom Joe Allen
0:38:45 ## CapCom Karl Henize
0:39:23 ## Deploying the lunar rover
0:39:47 ## Riding the rover
0:40:26 ## Flight Director Gerry Griffin
0:40:45 ## The problem with the drill
0:41:55 ## Dr Ray Pemberton: North Complex was always a maybe. We need those deep core samples.
0:42:07 ## Back in the LM
0:42:17 ## Jim Irwin: I just need some water, that's all. The darn line kinked up in the suit.
0:43:41 ## Removing the core sample
0:44:35 ## 6 — "The thing they came for"
0:44:43 ## Error: No craters in the lunar soil
0:45:40 ## Error: The photo shows the Apollo 17 landing site
0:45:50 ## 145:41:17 Irwin: Get that unusual one?
0:45:52 ## Error: The Genesis Rock is picked up from a small slope comprised of dust and small rocks. It was actually perched very obviously on top of a pedestal of soil and the astronauts discussed how to remove it. As usual, they took before-and-after photos, including a stereo pair — AS15-86-11670 to 11674, AS15-90-12227 and 12228.
0:45:54 ## 145:41:48 Scott: Oh, boy, it's a beaut!
0:45:58 ## 145:42:23 Scott: And it's a... a white clast, and it's about...
0:46:01 ## 145:42:41 Irwin: Oh, man!
0:46:02 ## 145:42:42 Scott: Look at that.
0:46:04 ## 145:42:46 Irwin: Almost see twinning in there!
0:46:07 ## 145:42:47 Scott: Guess what we just found. (Jim laughs with pleasure) Guess what we just found! I think we found what we came for.
0:46:28 ## 145:43:37 Scott: Make this bag, 196, a special bag.
0:46:34 ## Stan Blaisdell: You know, I doubt a random surface sample would have ever pulled that out of the hat.
0:47:30 ## Hadley Rille
0:48:45 ## Hammer and feather
0:48:45 ## 167:22:06 Scott: Well, in my left hand, I have a feather; in my right hand, a hammer. And I guess one of the reasons we got here today was because of a gentleman named Galileo, a long time ago, who made a rather significant discovery about falling objects in gravity fields. And we thought where would be a better place to confirm his findings than on the Moon.
0:49:10 ## 167:22:28 Scott: And so we thought we'd try it here for you. The feather happens to be, appropriately, a falcon feather for our Falcon. And I'll drop the two of them here and, hopefully, they'll hit the ground at the same time.
0:49:23 ## Note that the feather is held vertical by the actor — Dave Scott held it horizontal
0:49:25 ## Hammer and feather dropped. The feather rotates due to air resistance, showing the difficulty of doing such an experiment in an atmosphere.
0:49:26 ## Cut to the actor's feet. The hammer comes down at a different angle to the last scene and the feather is again rotating.
0:49:27 ## 167:22:43 Scott: How about that!
0:49:30 ## 167:22:46 Scott: Which proves that Mr. Galileo was correct in his findings.
0:49:35 ## 167:22:58 Allen: Superb.
0:49:45 ## Mission Control
0:51:22 ## Sample # 15415: The Genesis Rock
0:51:48 ## The Genesis Rock
0:51:56 ## Lee Silver: It may be as old as the solar system itself.
0:53:09 ## End credits
0:55:16 ## End