
| Ground Elasped Time
                    (hh:mm:ss) | Type or Circumstance | Notes | 
| Apollo 11 | ||
| Technical Debriefing | Need to get closer to
                    the surface | Armstrong - "In
                    general, there
                    were a lot of times that I wanted to get down closer
                    to the surface for
                    one reason or another.  I wanted to get my hand
                    down to the
                    surface to pick up something.  This was one
                    thing that restricted
                    us more than we'd like.  We really didn't have
                    complete clearance
                    to go put our knees on the surface any time we
                    wanted.  We thought
                    the suit was qualified to do that in an emergency,
                    but it wasn't
                    planned as a normal operation."  Extended
                    discussion of kneeling. | 
| 109:44:57 | Using the ladder for
                    support | While holding onto
                    the ladder
                    with his right hand, Buzz tries reaching down to his
                    left, probably
                    bending his knees.  "Reaching down is fairly
                    easy. " | 
| 110:52:57 | Dynamic grab | Neil bobs down to one
                    knee to
                    grab something off the ground, possibly the close-up
                    camera. 
                    During the post-mission Technical Debriefing, Neil
                    mentioned that had
                    to pick it up off the surface on three separate
                    occasions, bobbing down
                    once and using tools the other two times. 
                    "It's a major effort to
                    get down to the surface to pick the thing up." 
                    Discussion | 
| 111:23:29 | Using the MESA for
                    support | Buzz bends his knees
                    and reaches
                    forward to get the close-up camera. | 
| Apollo 12 | ||
| 118:19:43 | Leaning on a rock? | On the way back from
                    Middle
                    Crescent Crater, Pete and Al want to collect some
                    samples that prove to
                    be too big for the tongs. The dialog suggests that
                    Al leans on a larger
                    rock and has Pete push the desired samples into
                    reach.  No TV. | 
| 133:44:09 | Using a strap to get
                    low | Al takes hold of a
                    strap on the
                    Surveyor parts bag Pete is wearing and provides
                    support while Pete
                    reaches down to grab a sample.  Although Pete
                    and Al recommended
                    this technique for use by later crews, it was never
                    repeated.  No
                    TV. | 
| Apollo 14 | ||
| 113:52:26 | Going to one knee | Shepard, from the
                    Technical
                    Debrief - "Balance was good and getting control was
                    good.  I did
                    not fall down at any time during either EVA.  I
                    got down on my
                    knee a couple of times to pick up some things, but I
                    got right back up
                    again.  Never, at any time, did I have any
                    trouble with falling
                    down and balance." | 
| 115:26:10 | Using a LM strut for
                    support | Al leans on the LM
                    strut while
                    he places the back-up, B&qmp;W TV in the east
                    footpad. | 
| 115:27:47 | Using tongs rather
                    than kneeling | Ed drops the weigh
                    bags and,
                    rather than use the MESA for support, gets the tongs
                    from Al. "It'd
                    probably save getting any dirtier than necessary." | 
| 115:30:09 | Flight suit not
                    "broken in" | Mitchell, from the
                    Technical
                    Debrief - "Although my suit did exceptionally well,
                    far better than the
                    training suit ever did, it was still stiffer and
                    took more effort to
                    just hustle around than the training suit did, which
                    was well broken
                    in.  I encountered a little bit of a problem
                    with bending over,
                    which I had not encountered in one g, and I think
                    this is in proportion
                    to the forces between the one-sixth g and the
                    stiffness of the suit
                    compared with the well-worked-in suit in one
                    g.  I found that I
                    could not bend down to the MET level.  I could
                    not just bring my
                    body forward like I could in the training suit and
                    get down to the
                    MET.  I had to bend my knees or get down on a
                    knee to reach things
                    low on the MET, such as the weigh bags down on the
                    side, or the camera
                    retaining clips on the MET.  It was more
                    difficult for me to bend
                    down for them (than it had been in training)." 
                    Al commented, "I
                    don't know whether it was unique to Ed's suit or
                    not, because I didn't
                    have that problem." | 
| 116:50:38 | Bobbing down to one
                    knee | Ed goes briefly to
                    one knee,
                    perhaps putting the first geophone in the ground. | 
| Apollo 15 | ||
| 120:52:24 | Using the Rover
                    support | Dave leans on the
                    front of the
                    Rover to lock the high-gain mast in place. | 
| 122:55:50 | Using the scoop to
                    lift an end
                    of the dropped tongs into reach | Dave dropped his
                    tongs earlier
                    and, rather than try a dynamic grab or go to his
                    knees, he has Jim lift
                    one end of the tongs with the scoop.  With his
                    knees bent, Dave
                    gets low eough to grab the tongs. | 
| 122:56:48 | Deeply bent knee with
                    the other
                    leg out to the side as a counterweight | Dave gets his left
                    leg out to
                    the side and then bends his right knee almost to 90
                    degrees to get a
                    sample bag low enough for Jim to pour in some soil
                    from the
                    scoop.  At 122:57:06, Dave moves downhill till
                    he is level with
                    Jim and doesn't  have to bend his knees as much
                    to get the sample
                    bag in position. | 
| 124:43:20 | Dynamic grab | Dave sticks his left
                    leg behind
                    him with his right knee flexed. He then bobs down
                    till his left knee is
                    almost to the ground and grabs the heat flow probe
                    that was on the top
                    of the HFE. | 
| 124:46:07 | Using the UHT as a
                    prop | Dave reaches down to
                    remove  a
                    dust cover from the heatflow package.  With the
                    UHT in his left
                    hand as
                    a prop, he extends his right leg to the side, bends
                    his right knee
                    inward, and reaches down easily with his right
                    hand.  Les effort
                    than
                    the dynamic grab he did without a prop three minutes
                    earlier or the one
                    he will do in about 25 minutes more. | 
| 125:11:04 | Dynamic grab | Dave bobs to one knee
                    to grab
                    the heat flow probe, which is on the ground next to
                    the emplacement
                    hole.  His first attempt fails.  Fendell
                    zooms in just in
                    time to
                    capture Dave's second, successful attempt.  As
                    he comes up, he
                    says, "I
                    sure wish I had a UHT." Most likely, he is thinking
                    that he could have
                    hooked the UHT handle under the cable to lift it. | 
| 125:13:53 | Dynamic grab | It takes Dave three
                    attempts to
                    get the probe bag off the ground. | 
| 125:23:15 | Dynamic grab | Easy grab of the
                    second heat
                    flow probe. | 
| 144:23:00 | Dynamic hammer blow | Dave wants to use the
                    hammer to
                    break open a 15-cm rock that is lying on a
                    flat-surface.  He puts
                    his right foot forward toward the rock, puts his
                    left foot back, and
                    flexes his knees, almost touching the ground with
                    his right knee. 
                    Once down, he breaks the rock with a single blow and
                    then lets the
                    internal suit pressure straighten his knees so he
                    can stand.  A
                    classic, elegant use of the suit. | 
| 148:27:01 | Dynamic grab | Easy grab of the wire
                    loop on
                    the drill.  The loop was about 15 cm off the
                    ground.  The
                    drill stem was nearby at about chest height, but
                    Dave didn't bother
                    using it. | 
| Apollo 16 | ||
| 119:24:37 | Probable dynamic grab | John practiced doing
                    dynamic
                    grabs in the 1/6th-g airplane. Charlie
                    comments,"Hey, you're doing
                    pretty well with that deep-knee-bend stuff." John
                    replies, Yeah, I
                    already picked up a rock to see if it was
                    possible."  No TV until
                    they put the camera on the Rover.  Discussion. | 
| 120:17:48 | Flexing the knees | To get something from
                    the back
                    of the MESA, Charlie  jumps far enough onto the
                    MESA to balance on
                    his stomach.  To get down, he bends his knees
                    up 90 degrees, kicks
                    them down, but doesn't come off.  A second
                    later, he pushes
                    himself off with his hands.  Discussion of the
                    difficulty of
                    keeping the knees bend against the internal pressure
                    of the suit. | 
| 120:18:21 | Kneeling using the
                    MESA for
                    support | Charlie has no
                    trouble kneeling
                    to pick up a piece of dropped equipment. | 
| 120:22:55 | Failed dynamic grab | John has dropped the
                    lower
                    flagstaff section and attempts to make the
                    grab.  He doesn't get
                    low enough and decides to kneel while using the
                    upper flagstaff section
                    for support. | 
| 121:04:29 | Dynamic grab | Charlie successfully
                    grabs the
                    drill-stem rack, which had tipped over. 
                    Although the relatively
                    large size of the rack made this grab relatively
                    easy, Charlie is
                    pleased with his success, "I'm getting where I can
                    bend down in that
                    suit, Tony." | 
| 121:11:53 | Dynamic grab | Charlie successfully
                    grabs the
                    wrench off the drill stems on his second attempt. He
                    does another
                    successful grab at 121:15:13,
                    jumping
                    up slightly before he starts down so that the knee
                    will bend
                    more and he can get lower. | 
| 121:16:48 | Using the drill for
                    support | As he completes one
                    of the
                    heatflow holes, Charlie has to lean forward to
                    maintain his grip on the
                    drill and keep it from turning ("torquing") as gets
                    close to full
                    depth.  He looks very stable. | 
| 121:26:12 | Leaning on drill to
                    reach down | With his feet well
                    back, Charlie
                    leans forward on the drill with his left hand to
                    attach the wrench to
                    the stems.  To get up, Charlie keeps his weight
                    on his left hand
                    and moves his feet far enough toward the drill that
                    he can stand easily. | 
| 121:52:04 | Dynamic grab | Charlie grabs the
                    rammer-jammer
                    on his second try. In coming  back up, he
                    springs completely off
                    the ground.  He lands on both feet and then
                    does a small hop to
                    his left to get his balance. | 
| 121:53:10 | Failed dynamic grab | Charlie misses the
                    rock he was
                    trying to grab and has to scramble to his left to
                    avoid falling. | 
| 122:52:04 | Dynamic grab | John grabs a dropped
                    SCB. 
                    He is partly obscured by the back of the Rover. | 
| 123:58:35 | Stable bent knee
                    posture to use
                    the hammer | John sticks his left leg out to the side and then bends his right knee enough to use the hammer on a partially-buried rock. He stays down for about 5 seconds while he strikes the rock twice. After John stands up for a moment, Charlie offers to hold him down and, as John gets down again, Charlie puts his hand on John's left shoulder. John pries a piece of the rock loose and then rises, only having stayed down for a second or two. Note that John wasn't having to reach down quite as far as Dave Scott did when he used the hammer in the Station 6 crater at 144:23:00. | 
| 124:08:01 | Collecting the
                    biggest Apollo
                    sample | As he had done three
                    times wiile
                    working on the far side of Plum Crater, Charlie puts
                    the scoop out in
                    front of him, holding onto it as his sinks to his
                    knees.  "Big
                    Muley" is roughly cylindrical in shape and is about
                    20 cm tall and 15
                    cm in diameter.  It's terrestrial weight in
                    11.7 kg (26 lbs) but
                    only 2 kg (4.4 lbs) on the Moon.  It is the
                    bulk more than the
                    weight that makes collecting it a challenge. 
                    Charlie rolls the
                    rock toward his right leg and tries to get his
                    fingers under it and
                    roll it up onto his thigh.  That fails and he
                    them leans forward
                    far enough that he can wrap his fingers far enough
                    down that he can
                    press the rock firmly against his leg.  Still
                    using the scoop as a
                    support, he manages to stand.  He then release
                    his grip on the
                    scoop and moves his left hand down toward the
                    rock.  He then does
                    a little jump and the rock floats up enough that he
                    can get a solid
                    grip with both hands.  Excellent TV. | 
| 149:03:28 | Dynamic grab | Classic example of
                    John in action | 
| Apollo 17 | ||
| 118:25:54 | Balancing on toes
                    while in a
                    deep knee bend | Gene and Jack take
                    tourist
                    photos of each other with both the flag and Earth in
                    view.  To do
                    so, they bend their knees, almost kneeling and
                    balancing on their toes. | 
| 119:35:45 | Using the drill for
                    support | Gene puts his right hand on the drill for stability, puts his left leg back, and flexes his right knee until his left is almost touching the ground. He attaches the wrench to the drill stems and rises without difficulty. Gene uses the technique again when he picks up the neutron probe at 121:09:29. | 
| 119:36:39 | Dynamic grab | On what may be Gene's
                    first
                    attempt at a dynamic grab, he gets down and holds
                    the position long
                    enough to remove the wrench from the drill
                    stems.  He will need
                    some practice to become efficient. | 
| 119:39:53 | Leaning on the drill
                    without
                    kneeling | To remove the wrench
                    from the
                    drill stems, Gene puts the drill down, bends his
                    knees enough to get
                    his right hand on the drill, moves his feet back a
                    short way, bends his
                    knees slightly and, with most of his weight on his
                    hand, is able to
                    remove the wrench.  He then steps forward and
                    rises without
                    difficulty.  He does something similar when
                    attaching the wrench
                    at 119:44:46
                    and removing it a short time later. "Oh, man, that
                    works great!" | 
| 119:48:57 | Knee bends | Gene does a series of
                    quick knee
                    bends so he can push the heatflow probe into the
                    drill stems.  He
                    doesn't use any support. | 
| 120:08:01 | Dynamic grab | Gene knocks over the
                    drill and,
                    in part because one of the handles is sticking up,
                    grabs it without
                    trouble. | 
| 120:33:02 | Kneel, dynamic grab,
                    kneel,
                    dynamic grab, kneel.  Difficulty  of
                    working in a small
                    crater. | In a somewhat
                    frustrating and
                    certainly tiring sequence,  Gene uses the drill
                    for support so he
                    can go to his knees to thread a drill stem into the
                    one in the
                    ground.  As he gets to his feet, he knocks the
                    drill over and,
                    after failing with one dynamic grab attempt, gets it
                    with the
                    second.  He rests for a moment and them uses
                    the drill again to
                    kneel while he tries to remove the wrench.  He
                    is unable to free
                    it and hops to his feet to have a rest.  After
                    a few seconds, he
                    tries to re-position the drill, but it falls
                    over.  Once again, it
                    takes him two tries to get low enough to grab the
                    drill.  At the
                    end of this sequence, he mentions that he has been
                    working in a small
                    crater and that working on the slopes was difficult. | 
| 120:51:30 | Using the suit while
                    removing
                    the deep core with the jack | To get maximum throw
                    of the jack
                    handle, Gene does deep knee bends but, after a short
                    while, he gets on
                    his knees so he can push the jack handle all the way
                    to the ground.
                    He has his left hand on the core stems for
                    stability.  Later, he
                    rises up off his knees and then drops back down to
                    put more
                    force on the handle.  "It was a lot of hard
                    work; and not at all
                    easy."  After about 4 minutes of effort, Gene
                    stands to rest,
                    using the jack handle for support. Comments from
                    Jack, twenty years
                    later, on Gene ability to bend his knees "almost
                    with his backside on
                    his heels.  There's no way I could have done
                    that; I just couldn't
                    bend my suit that much."  During Jack effort
                    with the jack
                    starting at about 121:00:02,
                    although
                    he litterally throws his weight onto the handle, he
                    gets very
                    little knee bend at the bottom of each stroke. | 
| 120:55:55 | Efficient use of the
                    jack while
                    kneeling | During Gene's second
                    session
                    with the jack, he is on his knees with his right
                    hand on the core stems
                    for stability.  As he pushes the handle down
                    with his left hand,
                    he leans to the left to push the handle all the way
                    down, raising his
                    right knee a few inches off the ground to get better
                    leverage. 
                    After nine strokes, he uses the core stem for
                    support and he hops up
                    onto his feet.  Gene is righthanded. | 
| 121:01:30 | Controlled fall on
                    the jack
                    handle | After Jack's
                    spectacular fall,
                    he has more success with the jack by grasping the
                    core stem with
                    his right hand - Gene is also holding the stems,
                    probably to minimize
                    any lateral stress Jack might impart - and does a
                    controlled fall,
                    pushing the handle down with his extended left
                    arm.  Gene has his
                    left foot on the treadle to keep it steady. 
                    After Jack does four
                    strokes, they change places.  Gene goes to his
                    knees and, as he
                    did earlier, leans to his left as he pushes the jack
                    handle all the way
                    down.  After about six more strokes, working
                    the handle becomes
                    much easier. | 
| 122:19:01 | Leaning on boulder | Jack leans on the
                    Station 1
                    boulder while he breaks off a sample. | 
| 123:11:04 | Gene supports Jack
                    for deep knee
                    bend | Jack has to unfold
                    the SEP solar
                    panels, which are at about knee height.  To
                    avoid knocking the
                    transmitter over, he gets Gene support so he can do
                    a stable, deep knee
                    bend. | 
| 140:52:26 | Using the MESA for
                    support | Gene bends his knees,
                    using the
                    MESA for support, to reach the gravimeter button. | 
| 143:29:11 | Maintaining bent knee
                    posture | Gene uses the hammer
                    on the side
                    of a knee-high boulder.  Discussion of adapting
                    "to whatever the
                    suit would give you."  A short while later,
                    Jack flexes his knee
                    enough that he can skim the sample off the surface
                    with the scoop. | 
| 144:47:00 | Bobbing to one knee
                    on a slope | While working on the
                    slope
                    outside the rim of Ballet Crater, Jack faces
                    cross-slope and bobs down
                    to his upslope knee to retrieve the scoop. 
                    "Facing up a slope
                    like that, it was easy to get down and back up." | 
| 144:50:23 | Difficulties on the
                    slope at
                    Ballet Crater | Jack has a sequence
                    of mishaps,
                    dropping things and trying to retrieve them. | 
| 145:31:58 | Deep knee bend for
                    close-up
                    photography | Gene bends his knees
                    and gets up
                    on his toes to take some close-ups.  He has a
                    bit of trouble
                    getting into a stable position.  "In one-sixth
                    gravity you can go
                    down slow enough and you can waver in that
                    almost-kneeling position -
                    uncomfortable and hard to sustain - long enough to
                    get a couple of
                    pictures at a 125th of a second." | 
| 166:22:32 | Jack uses a boulder
                    for support;
                    Gene uses the hammer | Jack retrieves the
                    scoop using
                    the Station 7 boulder for support.  Separately,
                    Gene uses the
                    hammer as a support in the same way he used the
                    drill earlier; he
                    scoots his legs backwards as he leans on the hammer
                    without going to
                    his knees and tries to pick up a football-sized
                    rock.  It is too
                    big.  He goes to both knees and finally gets a
                    good grip.  He
                    uses the hammer to push himself far enough back that
                    he can stand. | 
| Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) | Subject or circumstance | Notes | 
| Apollo 11 | ||
| 109:44:57 | Trying knee bends at
                  the ladder | Buzz tries some knee
                  bends.  It may be at this point that he gets the
                  smudges of dirt
                  on his knees can be seen in AS11-40-5903. | 
| 110:52:57 | Bobbing Down on one
                  knee | Neil bobs down
                  briefly, apparently to grab something off the ground,
                  probably the
                  Apollo Close-up Stereo Camera.  See the extensive
                  discussion of
                  kneeling following 110:45:03. | 
| Apollo 12 | ||
| 115:48:57 | Low value of kneeling
                  without a
                  hip bellows | In a 1991 comment, Pete
                  notes that kneeling was of less value the early
                  missions because their
                  suits did not have the hip
                    bellows/convolute that allowed the
                  J-mission astronauts sit on the Rover.  The lack
                  of a hip
                  convolute may have made cabin
                    egress more  difficult on the early
                  missions. | 
| 118:19:43 | Avoid kneeling to keep
                  clean | Pete and Al Bean went
                  to
                  some lengths to avoid kneeling, in hopes of keeping
                  the suits relatively
                  clean. | 
| 136:51:56 | Ways to kneel | From the post-EVA-2
                  debriefing: Gibson: Roger, Al. Say, did either one of you kneel down in order to get anything off the surface, or did you use the newly-developed Bean technique of holding on to the Surveyor parts bag and lowering the Commander to the surface? Conrad: Yeah. Well, we used all kinds of things like that. You could take the shovel and stick it in the ground and just do a one-arm pushup and lean down and pick up a rock off the ground with the other hand. It's really a ridiculous way to do it. If you had a suit that would bend, why, you'd have the whole program wired. But, you could do that. It's okay. I fell over once out there, and Al picked me back up again. It's no big deal. Bean: But, in the same sense, you're always fussing around trying to get down there to get these rocks, and we did kneel down a couple of times. I knelt down and picked some stuff up. And it's particularly easy if you got that Hand Tool Carrier with you. But we really do need to come up with some sort of strap or something that would allow you to lean over and grab a rock that won't fit in those tongs. | 
| Apollo 14 | ||
| 113:52:26 | Tech. Debrief extract | In discussing mobility
                  and
                  stability, Al mentions "I got down on my knee a couple
                  of times to pick
                  up some things, but I got right back up again." 
                  Emphasize the
                  value of training in the 1/6th-g airplane. | 
| 115:30:09 | Tech. Debrief extract | Ed comments on the greater difficulty reaching low on the Moon. Al says he didn't have any trouble. In the TV, he goes down almost to a kneeling position to attach a weigh bag to the MET. | 
| 116:17:29 | Kneeling with torso
                  vertical | When the astronauts
                  were at the
                  ALSEP deployment site, TV images of their suits were
                  badly
                  bloomed.  Nonetheless, we see one of them -
                  possibly Ed - sink to
                  his knees with his center-of-mass well back and then,
                  after placing the
                  SIDE subpallet on the ground, rising easily to his
                  feet.  Ed may
                  have used his Universal Handling Tool as a prop to
                  help him keep the
                  internal pressure of the suit from straightening his
                  knees while he got
                  down.  Similar episode at 116:36:53. | 
| 116:50:38 | Bobbing down onto one
                  knee | Ed pushes a geophone
                  into the
                  ground. | 
| 131:24:16 | Using the MET for
                  support | Ed uses the MET for
                  support so
                  he can kneel and grab a dropped map. | 
| 132:42:43 | Drop to one knee | During the climb to
                  Cone, Ed
                  tells Houston, "Al just dropped down on a knee to pick
                  up a rock, and
                  he went in 3 or 4 inches.  Ed has to help Al get
                  up. | 
| 133:43:30 | Collect a large rock | Working near the rim of
                  Cone
                  Crater, Al collects a 9 kg rock and, although there is
                  no TV coverage,
                  he almost certainly used the same technique used by Dave
                    Scott and Charlie
                    Duke to collect their big rocks: using a
                  long-handled tool for
                  support while kneeling, pressing the rock against his
                  leg, and then
                  rising. | 
| Apollo 15 | ||
| 120:44:01 | Keeping clean | In comments on a 1996
                  draft of
                  the A15LSJ, Dave wrote, "I cannot imagine that a
                  (dirty) suit would not
                  compromise cooling by the PLSS, but maybe we were
                  oversensitized to
                  this issue. Kneeling in the dirt still seems
                  very unattractive
                  to me! More dirt in the cabin, connectors, etc!! After
                  three days of
                  dirt on Apollo 15, I would be even more cautious on
                  the next
                  trip."  See, also, comments after 120:58:47. | 
| 125:22:02 | Kneeling to put wrench
                  on the
                  drill stems | Dave drilled very
                  deeply and has
                  to put the wrench on the stems very close to the
                  ground.  He uses
                  the drill as a support in getting up. | 
| 145:53:23 | Going sideways onto one
                  knee | While securing Jim's
                  SCB
                  harness, Dave goes down on his right knee and holds
                  the position for
                  about 5
                  sections before finishing the job and rising. While he
                  goes down and
                  holds his position, he has his left palm on the back
                  of Jim's PLSS for
                  stability.  There are few (no?)
                  similar instances in the Apollo TV record. | 
| 147:36:15 | Using the drill for
                  support,
                  saved fall | Dave uses the drill for
                  support
                  as he kneels so he can attach the wrench to the drill
                  stem.  the
                  top of the drill is at about knee height.  He
                  has to reach forward with his righthand and ends up
                  with all his weight
                  on his left hand, with which he is holding the near
                  drill handle, and
                  on his right knee.  His right knee starts to
                  slide under his to
                  his right and he has to use both hands to push himself
                  up and avoid a
                  fall. | 
| 147:41:21 | Using the drill for
                  support | Dave uses the drill for
                  support
                  as he gets to his knees and tries to put the wrench on
                  the drill
                  stem.  This time, the drill is at about waist
                  height, so he has
                  far less trouble than when it was lower. 
                  Commentary just prior to 147:42:16. | 
| 165:32:56 | Going to one knee or,
                  perhaps,
                  both knees and picking up his dropped camera without
                  support | After Dave's
                  spectacular trip
                  and fall at the rille, he asks Jim to use the scoop to
                  raise the camera
                  lens barrel into reach.  Jim in unable to do that
                  because the
                  barrel slides away on the soft surface.  Dave
                  then goes down onto
                  one knee - or, possibly, both knees -  and, once
                  he has the
                  camera, rises without difficulty.  He is partly
                  obscured by Jim,
                  so we don't know if he was on one knee or both. 
                  Because Dave
                  grabbed the camera with his right hand, we know he
                  didn't use Jim for
                  support. | 
| 165:39:39 | Going to one knee,
                  making use of
                  a shelf at the base of the rock | Dave is able to kneel
                  next to a
                  rock by putting his right knee on a shelf at the base
                  of the rock and
                  sticking his left leg out to the side, with his foot
                  noticeably lower
                  than his right knee.  He keeps his back
                  relatively vertical. | 
| 166:09:00 | Kneeling to collect
                  Great Scott | Dave gets down on both
                  knees,
                  without support.  He is leaning well back,
                  undoubtedly to put his
                  center-of-mass behind his knees to keep his knees
                  bent.  His feet
                  are slightly uphill of his knees, which probably helps
                  him keep his
                  balance.  He has the rock on his right and has a
                  bit of trouble
                  getting his hand low enough to get the rock pressed
                  against the outside
                  of his leg.  The rock is much bigger than his
                  hand.  At one
                  point, he starts to tip to his right, but gets his
                  hand out to steady
                  himself and his left leg out on the other side as a
                  counterweight.  His second attempt goes well and,
                  as he gets the
                  rock onto the outside of his right thigh, he stands
                  easily. | 
| Apollo 16 | ||
| 120:22:55 | Kneeling with flagstaff
                  section
                  for support | After failing in his
                  first
                  attempt at a dynamic grab, John uses the upper
                  flagstaff section for
                  support as he goes to his knees to retrieve the lower
                  flagstaff section
                  he had dropped earlier. At 120;24:20, Charlie comments
                  on how dirty
                  John's lower legs are already.  See, also, AS16-113-18339,
                  which
                  Charlie takes soon after. | 
| 121:21:21 | Kneeling to inspect
                  damaged
                  heatflow cable connection | After John accidentally
                  catches
                  the heatflow ribbon cable on his boot and pulls it
                  loose from the
                  Central Station, he kneels twice as he assesses the
                  damage. 
                  He  uses a 30-cm rock for  support on the
                  first
                  occasion;  on the second occasion, once his is on
                  his knees, he
                  takes hold of a protruding piece of attachment
                  hardware for a bit of
                  stability.  He is remarkably stable throughout
                  this sequence. | 
| 121:26:12 | Kneeling with the drill
                  for
                  support | For his second attempt
                  to attach
                  the wrench, Charlie puts his right hand on the drill
                  for support while
                  he gets to his knees.  His posture suggests that
                  the internal suit
                  pressure is keeping him from getting all of his weight
                  on his knees. | 
| 121:37:04 | Kneeling with the
                  chest-high
                  drill stem for support | Holding on the the
                  drill stem
                  with his right hand, Charlie drops easily to his knees | 
| 121:45:34 | Repeatedly dropping to
                  the knees
                  to work the jack | Charlie gets maximum
                  utility
                  from the jack by dropping to his knees on each stroke
                  and "letting the
                  suit do the work" of getting up. | 
| 123:59:15 | Using the scoop/shovel
                  for
                  support | Charlie puts the head
                  of the
                  scoop perhaps 1.5 meters out in front of the his feet
                  and leans on it
                  with his left hands as he sinksto his knees.
                  Initially, he has his back
                  nearly vertical and can't reach low enough to pick up
                  the rock fragment
                  John pried off the partially-buried boulder.  He
                  leans forward
                  till his back is about 30 degrees off vertical, moves
                  himself perhaps
                  30 cm to his right, and grabs the fragment.  He
                  gets to his feet
                  without difficulty, not having moved the scoop head at
                  all. 
                  Charlie uses the technique again at 124:04:44
                  and at 124:06:34. | 
| 124:08:01 | Using the scoop for
                  support  while collecting Big Muley | This time, Charlie is
                  much
                  closer to the Rover and we get a good look at the
                  technique and what he
                  has to do the pick up this very large rock, the
                  largest single sample
                  returned from the Moon during Apollo. | 
| 165:59:44 | Kneeling while working
                  on LMP
                  PLSS | John kneels while
                  attaching the
                  bottom straps on Charlie's Sample Collection Bag
                  (SCB).  Motions
                  of Charlie's PLSS suggest that John uses him for some
                  support. 
                  Another example can be found at 122:52:32. | 
| Apollo 17 | ||
| 118:25:54 | Kneeling at the MESA | Because the MESA is
                  lower than
                  expected, Gene has to get on his knees to remove the
                  drill.  With
                  the MESA for support, he has no trouble staying down
                  or getting up.
                  Partial TV. | 
| 120:33:02 | Kneeling with the drill
                  for
                  support | Gene is unable to seat
                  a new
                  drill stem in the one in the ground and leans on the
                  drill so he can
                  get on both knees. | 
| 122:18:17 | Using the scoop for
                  support | Gene kneels at the
                  Station 1
                  boulder to hammer off some fragments, but can't get
                  properly positioned
                  to effectively wield the hammer.  He uses the
                  scoop as a support,
                  moves his knees back 20-30 cm and leans forward on the
                  scoop with his
                  left hand while he hammers with his right.  He
                  has his back to the
                  TV.  With the scoop as a prop, he gets up easily. | 
| 123:13:03 | Kneeling and using a
                  partially
                  buried boulder for support | On his way back to the
                  LM, Jack
                  stops to inspect a boulder that is perhaps 3-4 meters
                  across with only
                  about 20 cm sticking out of the ground.  He lets
                  himself fall
                  forward until he is leaning on the boulder with his
                  knees on the
                  surrounding soil.  He gets up on his second try
                  at pushing back to
                  get his center-of-mass behind his knees. | 
| 145:27:50 | On hands and knees to
                  retrieve
                  the scoop | Before retrieving the
                  dropped
                  scoop, Jack kicks it to his right so that, when he
                  drops to his hands
                  and knees, his feet will be downslope of the scoop,
                  perhaps in a small
                  crater.  This will give him leverage when he
                  pushes back off his
                  hands to rotate his center-of-mass far enough back
                  that he can stand. | 
| 145:32:42 | Getting to one knee on
                  a slope | The surface near the
                  orange soil
                  slopes shallowly upward from the direction of the
                  Rover.  To get a
                  scoop of soil out of the trench, Jack gets his right
                  foot downslope and
                  lowers himself onto his left, upslope knee. Similar
                  situation to Dave
                  Scott's at 165:39:39. 
Jack
tries
                  a similar technique soon after at the south end of the
                  trench, but loses his balance. | 
| 166:59:49 | Using Gene's hand for
                  support | Jack goes to his knees
                  to get a
                  fragment Gene hammered off the Station 8
                  boulder.  Two minutes
                  later, we see Jack on hands and knees examining the
                  boulder. | 
| 167:04:26 | On hands and knees to
                  roll the
                  Station 8 boulder | Gene has his back to
                  the Rover,
                  so we don't get good views of him getting down or
                  getting up, we do get
                  a good view of the vigorous push he gives the boulder
                  with his right
                  hand, while balancing himself on his left. | 
| Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) | Type | Notes | 
| Apollo 11: no known falls | ||
| 109:44:23 | Potential of fallling
                  when
                  jumping | Armstrong, from the
                  1969
                  Technical Debrief - "I would say that balance
                  (while walking)
                  was not difficult; however, I did some fairly high
                  jumps and found that
                  there was a tendency to tip over backwards on a high
                  jump.  One
                  time I came close to falling and decided that was
                  enough of
                  that."  Note that Charlie Duke attempted
                  a high jump
                  during Apollo 16 (see below).  He tipped over
                  backwards and landed
                  on his PLSS, fortunately without any consequences
                  other than a
                  momentary fright and a bit of wounded pride. | 
| 111:34:36 | Slippery surfaces | Crew comments on
                  tendency to
                  slip while  using the Lunar Equipment Conveyor
                  (LEC); and on
                  various factors that could make footing
                  difficult.  Later crews
                  did not comment on these issues, probably having had
                  the benefit of
                  knowing what to expect and having more time to adapt
                  to lunar
                  conditions.  Apollo 11 was the only crew to do
                  much walking - as
                  opposed to hopping or running - which may have also
                  been a factor. | 
| Apollo 12: two probable falls | ||
| 115:27:19 | New posture | Early in the first EVA,
                  Al Bean
                  comments that, because of the weight of the backpack,
                  they are having
                  to lean far forward to get their center-of-mass over
                  their feet. 
                  "On Earth, you'd fall over (leaning so far
                  forward)."  Adjusting
                  to this  new posture took a few minutes. 
                  Additional comments
                  about not moving backwards.  Pete Conrad mentions
                  that, contrary
                  to comments by the Apollo 11 crew, he did not notice
                  that the ground
                  felt "slippery". | 
| 115:30:20 | Stumble, no fall | Pete after telling Al,
                  who is
                  still in the LM, "you've really got to watch your step
                  down here." A
                  moment later, while adjusting the height of the MESA,
                  he says "I almost
                  fell." | 
| 117:19:03 | Probable fall | Bean discusses the
                  greater
                  hazard of moving backwards rather than forwards and
                  mentions that "I
                  tripped a couple of times going backwards."  One
                  such instance may
                  have happened at 117:32:04. | 
| 118:25:59 | Probable fall | Bean probably fell; but
                  got up
                  without difficulty.  Conrad may have helped him
                  get up.  In
                  1991, Bean remembered, "I fell down a couple of
                  times." | 
| 132:46:22 | Wary of steep slopes | Conrad and Bean had a
                  "safety
                  line" which they might have used in case one of them
                  needed help
                  getting out of a crater.  It was no more than
                  about 10 meters long
                  and was never used.  They thought about going
                  into Bench Crater
                  but decided that the walls were too  steep and
                  the danger of
                  falling was too great.  With regard to the
                  latter, they seem to
                  have been concerned primarily with falling in a
                  position from which it
                  would be difficult to get up.  For example, on
                  their back with
                  head downslope.  Later crews gained experience
                  with steep slopes
                  and, during Apollo 17, getting up from a difficult
                  position. | 
| 136:51:56 | Pete fell | During the post-EVA-2
                  debriefing, Pete said, "I fell over once out there,
                  and Al picked me
                  back up again.  It's no big deal."  The time
                  when this
                  happened has not been identified. | 
| Apollo 14: One possible stumble or near fall | ||
| 118:15:33 | Stumble, saved | Off camera, Al Shepard
                  may have
                  stumbled while working around the ladder during EVA-1
                  close-out. 
                  The dialog suggests that he caught himself by grabbing
                  the MESA. 
                  In a section of the Technical Crew Debriefing
                  reproduced after 113:52:26,
                  Al
                  says he did not fall during either of the EVAs. 
                  Comments about
                  stability and ease of adaptation. | 
| 135:16:39 | Cable snag, no fall | During the EVA-2
                  close-out, Al
                  repeatedly snags the TV cable with his foot and at 135:24:38,
                  actually
                  pulls the TV over.  He does not appear to stumble
                  during
                  any of these episodes. | 
| Apollo 15: 3 falls, 1 possible fall, 4 saves, 3 stumbles | ||
| 120:02:47 | Saved fall | The footpad on the
                  ladder strut
                  is not resting firmly on the ground and is free to
                  move.  When Jim
                  Irwin steps on the footpad for the first time, it
                  rotates under him and
                  he saves himself from a fall by grabbing the right
                  handrail. | 
| 120:11:24 | Cable hazard | Jim moves the TV cable
                  so they
                  don't trip over it during Rover deployment. | 
| 120:16:05 | Fall walking backwards | During the LRV
                  deployment, Jim
                  backed away from the LM pulling a lanyard and trying
                  to take pictures
                  at the same time.  He was off camera when he
                  tripped and
                  fell.  Dave Scott gave him a hand getting
                  up.  Later, he
                  learned to get up by himself.  "It wasn't
                  difficult ... but it was
                  much easier, you know, to get your buddy to lift you
                  up." 
                  Technique described. | 
| 120:42:29 | Off balance, saved fall | Dave loses his balance
                  while
                  installing the LCRU on the front of the Rover. 
                  He hops in the
                  direction of the fall, which gives him time to get his
                  hand onto the
                  Rover wheel to steady himself. | 
| 120:44:01 | discuss care versus
                  efficiency | Discussion of the
                  relative value
                  of (1) trying to keep clean, (2) brushing the suits
                  after a fall or
                  saved fall to avoid excess use of cooling water, or
                  (3) letting the
                  suits get dirty in the interest of using the limited
                  time available
                  most efficiently.  The Apollo 16 and 17 crews
                  made little effort
                  to keep clean and only brushed each other off at the
                  end of each
                  EVA. They threw themselves into their work and fell
                  more frequently.
                  For longer lunar stays, dust control will be
                  essential. | 
| 122:43:06 | Stumble, no fall | Dave tries to get a
                  sample bag
                  low enough for Jim to reach and stumbles forward. | 
| 123:00:46 | working on slopes | Working on a hillside
                  at Station
                  2, Dave has to find a way to stand so he can hold a
                  sample bag low
                  enough for Jim to reach.  Working on slopes
                  required care to avoid
                  falls. | 
| 124:01:38 | possbile fall during
                  Rover
                  dismount | Back at the LM at the
                  end of the
                  EVA-1 traverse, Jim may have fallen.  Dave wants
                  to look at Jim's
                  camera in case it needs dusting. | 
| 124:48:02 | Saved fall | Dave attempts a
                  spinning throw -
                  like an Olympic discus thrower - of an empty
                  experiment pallet. 
                  His spin continues after he releases the pallet. 
                  He is off
                  balance but gets his right hand on the ground for some
                  stability and
                  ends up on his feet. | 
| 143:54:33 | Rover dismount on steep slope | At Station 6, Dave
                  parked with
                  the Rover pointed uphill on an 11-degree slope. 
                  Dave warns Jim
                  about the possibility of falling backwards when they
                  jump out of the
                  seats.  Dave may have helped Jim dismount. | 
| 144:13:00 | stumble, no fall | Dave stumbles slightly
                  while
                  turning to get some sunlight on a rock he is
                  examining. | 
| 145:01:44 | Rover dismount on steep
                  slope | At Station 6a, Dave had
                  to park
                  on a steep slope with Jim on the downslope side of the
                  Rover. 
                  Dave warns him to be careful jumping off his seat. | 
| 145:30:28 | Difficulty of bending
                  back to
                  look up without falling | At Spur Crater, Dave is
                  trying
                  to use a sighting scope to point the high-gain antenna
                  at Earth. 
                  He asks Jim to look up at Earth to help him get a
                  rough alignment but
                  Jim decides that, because Earth is so high in the
                  local sky, he would
                  fall if he tried. The sighting scope was re-configured
                  for Apollo 16
                  and A17, primarily to give a brighter image of
                  Earth.  Here, Dave
                  used LCRU Automatic Gain Control output to get a rough
                  alignment. 
                  The only way to look overhead in the suits was to use
                  the ladder or
                  some other firm support while leaning backwards or
                  turning sideways. | 
| 143:56:37 | Working on a slope | Jim decides to omit the
                  uphill
                  frames of a panorama because of the difficulty of
                  leaning backwards. | 
| 144:27:45 | Uphill fall on a steep
                  slope | Dave tries to climb out
                  of a
                  steep crater and loses his balance because of the soft
                  surface. 
                  He starts to fall to his right but stops that
                  component of the frall
                  with his right hand.  Jim helps him up. | 
| 145:49:15 | Stumble, no fall | Jim stumbles, but does
                  not fall,
                  while standing on the slope just inside Spur Crater
                  taking pictures. | 
| 146:08:28 | Maintaining balance
                  while
                  collecting large rocks | While off-camera, Jim
                  collects a
                  4.8 kg rock.  The dialog suggests that he uses
                  the same technique
                  used by Dave
used
                    at Station 9a and by Charlie
Duke
                    at Apollo 16 Station 1. | 
| 147:37:03 | Off balance, saved fall | Dave loses his balance
                  while
                  trying to attach a tool to the drill stem.  He
                  starts out on his
                  knees and has his left hond on the near drill handle
                  for support. 
                  He has to reach far forward to attach the tool with
                  his right
                  hand.  As he extends his reach, his left knee
                  comes off the ground
                  and his right knee starts to slide toward his
                  left.  Because of the weight of the backpack, he
                  starts to
                  rotate to his right onto his back.  To catch
                  himself, Dave grabs
                  the drill with his right hand and pushed up with his
                  right foot. As he
                  comes up, he gets his right leg under his center of
                  mass and, with his
                  left leg stuck out behind, spins through about ninety
                  degrees. As he
                  brings his left leg down, he makes a few short steps
                  away from the
                  drill and, finally, brings himself to a stop with a
                  two-footed hop. The
                  elapsed time from the start of the fall to the end of
                  the final hop was
                  almost six seconds and this episode is a dramatic
                  illustration of the
                  length of time one has to respond in one-sixth
                  gravity. | 
| 149:02:04 | Suit dirty from falls | While using the dust
                  brush on
                  Dave at the end of EVA-2, Jim Irwin wonders why the
                  front of Dave's
                  suit is so dirty.  He then remembers that Dave
                  has saved himself
                  from some spectacular falls, spraying dust around in
                  the process. | 
| 165:32:00 | Spectacular fall after
                  tripping | While describing
                  details he can
                  see in the far wall of Hadley Rille, Dave is walking
                  forward and trips
                  over a rock he hadn't noticed.  He fell onto his
                  hands and knees
                  and, as his momentum carried him out of the TV
                  field-of-view, he was
                  rolling onto his right side.  Jim goes to him to
                  help him get up
                  but, by the time Jim arrives, Dave is up.
                  Unfortunately, he was still
                  off camera when he got up.  To retrieve the
                  Hasselblad he was
                  carrying, Dave drops to his right knee, grabs the
                  camera, and gets up
                  without difficulty.  One-sixth grvity and the
                  soft surface made
                  this fall much less dangerous than it would have been
                  on Earth. | 
| Apollo 16: 12 falls, 4 saves | ||
| 120:08:35 | Loss of balance, no
                  fall | Charlie Duke loses his
                  balance
                  trying to tug loose the Velcro holding his seat back
                  down. | 
| 121:11:53 | Dynamic grab, no fall | Charlie bobs down to
                  get the
                  wrench off the drill string.  He had his right
                  leg well forward
                  and his left well back and got the wrench off without
                  losing his
                  balance.  They discuss the technique, which John
                  developed during
                  training in the 1/6th-g aircraft, at 119:24:37. | 
| 121:29:52 | Off-camera fall | Charlie Duke falls
                  while trying
                  to remove the drill from the deep-core stems.  TV
                  of him having
                  some trouble getting up from his hands and
                  knees.  He will learn
                  to get up more efficiently than he did this
                  time.  At 122:51:29,
                  during
                  preparations for the geology traverse, John Young
                  comments on
                  the amount of dust Charlie has on his suit and/or
                  PLSS. | 
| 121:53:10 | Loss of balance, no
                  fall | Charlie loses his
                  balance while
                  trying to bob down to grab a rock off the
                  surface.  Because lunar
                  gravity is weak, he has time to recover without
                  falling.  First
                  try at getting up doesn't work but then masters the
                  standard technique
                  of getting on hands and knees and then pushing with
                  his hands so he
                  rotates backwards with his knees and lower legs
                  staying on the
                  ground.  Once his center-of-mass is behind his
                  knees, he rises
                  easily. | 
| 122:40:42 | Dynamic grab, minor fall | Off-camera, Charlie
                  falls while
                  solo sampling, probably while trying to bob down to
                  grab the
                  rock.  He has some trouble getting up and, after
                  he is up, checks
                  to make sure his camera lens is clean. | 
| 123:42:57 | Dynamic grab, minor
                  fall | Off-camera, John tries
                  to bob
                  down to grab a fallen sample bag and falls. | 
| 124:08:29 | Care while collecting
                  very large
                  rock | Charlie collects the
                  sample
                  known as Big Muley from the rim of Plum Crater, using
                  the same
                  technique used by Scott and Irwin.  He is very
                  careful and does
                  not lose his balance.  At 11.7 kg (26 pounds), it
                  is the largest
                  sample collected during Apollo. | 
| 125:32:23 | Controlled fall | John dropped the
                  dustbrush and,
                  as he bobs down to grab it, loses his balance. 
                  Gets himself
                  turned during the fall so he lands on his hands and
                  knees. | 
| 125:46:07 | Ladder climbing | John climbs the ladder
                  using
                  only one hand on the rails and rungs.  He has a
                  rockbox in his
                  other hand.  Charlie urges care. | 
| 144:35:31 | Minor fall while getting up | Charlie ended up on his hands and knees when the penetroeter went all the way into the ground on a steep, soft slope at Station 4. He falls while trying to get up. | 
| 145:28:02 | Loss of balance on a soft slope, no fall | Charlie loses his
                  balance while
                  working on the soft, inner wall of a crater but runs
                  in place until he
                  can plant the rake and catch himself. | 
| 146:26:40 | Fall while mounting the
                  Rover | When Charlie tries to
                  jump into
                  his Rover seat, his PLSS hits the seatback and he
                  falls.  John
                  decides they will brush Charlie's lens at the next
                  station. | 
| 147:54:48 | Fall getting off the
                  Rover | At a level site,
                  Charlie has
                  trouble dismounting and falls when he does get
                  out.  After John
                  helps him up, he checks to make sure his camera lens
                  is clean. | 
| 149:12:03 | Minor fall while 
                  getting up | Charlie ended up on his
                  hands
                  and knees  when the penetroeter went all the way
                  into the ground
                  at a level site.  He falls while trying to get
                  up. | 
| 166:58:18 | Dynamic grab, minor
                  fall | John bobs down to grab
                  some
                  fallen bags.  It takes him an extra second or saw
                  to get them in
                  hand and, during that second, he starts to lose his
                  balance and falls
                  as he starts to rise.  He gets up with a novel
                  technique. | 
| 167:13:09 | Loss of balance, minor
                  fall | Off-camera, Charlie
                  falls while
                  trying to retrieve an SCB. | 
| 168:39:18 | Fall in awkward
                  position | Off-camera, Charlie
                  falls,
                  probably while picking up a sample he has broken off
                  Shadow Rock. 
                  He ends up on the ground next to the rock and has to
                  have John's help
                  to get up. | 
| 170:21:44 | Dangerous fall | After John does a few
                  jumps,
                  learning to control his balance by doing a series of
                  jumps that start
                  small and get larger and holding the Rover for
                  stability as he gets
                  started, Charlie does one small jump and then one very
                  large one. 
                  By the time he gets to the top of the jump, he is
                  leaning backwards by
                  20-30 degrees and, although he lands momentarily on
                  his feet, he cannot
                  keep himself from falling backwards onto his PLSS,
                  fortunately with no
                  damage. | 
| Apollo 17: 9 falls, 1 save, 5 stumbles | ||
| 117:21:16 | stumble, no fall | Early in EVA, Jack
                  Schmitt
                  stumbles but does not fall. No TV. | 
| 117:36:06 | minor fall | Gene Cernan falls while
                  trying
                  to pick up a dropped tool. "Well, I found how to get
                  up!"  No TV. | 
| 117:52:45 | minor fall | Jack falls while trying
                  to pick
                  up a rock.  No TV. | 
| 118:28:27 | Stable posture for
                  looking up,
                  no fall | Discussion of a stable
                  posture
                  Jack uses to look up at equipment on the top of the
                  LM. | 
| 119:35:45 | stumble, no fall | Gene stumbles while
                  trying to
                  take the wrench off the drill-stem rack. | 
| 119:49:04 | spinning throw, almost
                  falls | Like Dave Scott during
                  the
                  Apollo 15 ALSEP deployment, Gene does a spinning throw
                  and almost falls. | 
| 121:00:59 | Spectacular spinning
                  fall | While taking a turn
                  using a
                  jack-and-treadle to remove the deepcore, Jack throws
                  all his weight
                  onto the jack handle, loses his balance, and ends up
                  in a spectacular,
                  spinning fall.  Gene helps him up.  Although
                  Jack is mostly
                  hidden by Gene, as he gets to his feet we can see
                  Gene's right hand on
                  Jack helmet near the top of the visors.  Gene may
                  have been
                  pushing back on Jack's head to help him up. 
                  While he is down,
                  Jack doesn't get his knees bent more than about 60
                  degrees. | 
| 121:38:18 | stumble, no fall | Jack stumbles on a rock
                  near the
                  LM.  No TV. | 
| 122:13:01 | stumble, no fall | Gene stumbles slightly
                  on a
                  fist-sized rock while climbing out of a crater. | 
| 122:15:55 | stumble, no fall | Jack stumbles while
                  trying to
                  raise the scoop handle high enough to pour a sample
                  into a bag Gene is
                  holding as low as he can. | 
| 123:09:08 | Need for support when
                  leaning low | The solar panels on the SEP receiver wouldn't stay open on their own, so Jack had to put some duct tape on them. Because he had to put the tape on at about knee height, he had to lean on Gene to keep his balance. The TV was not pointed at them during this activity. | 
| 145:28:39 | Getting up in 1/6th
                  gravity | Cernan comments: "This
                  is not
                  meant as a criticism, but I think that Jack tended to
                  fall more than
                  the rest of us did.  And it's maybe because he
                  became more
                  aggressive.  And, thank God for one-sixth
                  gravity.  You would
                  have dropped things anyway because of the lack of
                  nimbleness and
                  dexterity and you would have wanted to get down to
                  pick things up and
                  chip rocks and what have you.  And one-sixth
                  gravity made getting
                  back up a lot easier than it would have been
                  otherwise." | 
| 144:02:16 | Minor fall | Off, camera, Gene falls
                  when
                  trying to mount the Rover at the Scarp Gravimeter
                  stop.  He is
                  able to hold on to the Rover to make getting up easy. | 
| 144:50:52 | Minor fall | While working on the
                  outer slope
                  of the raised rim of Ballet Crater  Jack goes to
                  one knee to pick
                  up a dropped SCB and falls trying to get up. 
                  Ballet Crater got
                  its name because of the efforts Jack had to make
                  repeatedly at this
                  site to retrieve dropped tools. | 
| 144:56:23 | Minor fall | Jack responds to CapCom
                  Bob
                  Parker's remark about the Houston Ballet calling to
                  request Jack's
                  services for the coming season by doing one-footed
                  hops on his right
                  leg with his left leg extended back and up.  He
                  is clearly
                  playing.  He loses his balance and falls to his
                  hands and
                  knees.  Discussion about confidence in the suit
                  as long as there
                  was no chance of falling on a sizeable rock. | 
| 146:36:38 | Working in a boulder
                  field | Need for caution in the
                  boulder
                  field on the rim of Camelot Crater | 
| 147:53:35 | Discuss distribution of
                  dust on
                  the suits | While dusting each
                  other off at
                  the end of EVA-2, Gene mentions that, during his fall
                  while trying to
                  get on the Rover at the Scarp Gravimeter stop, he only
                  got his outboard
                  (left) arm dirty and not his inboard (right)
                  arm.  Also discuss
                  the amount of time spend dusting each other. | 
| 164:59:13 | Working on a steep
                  slope | Off-camera, Gene has
                  trouble
                  reaching surfaces on the front of the Rover that need
                  dusting.  He
                  decides to defer the dusting to the next stop. 
                  Additional
                  comments at 165:04:48. | 
| 165:24:10 | Off-camera fall | While sampling on a
                  particularly
                  steep slope - as evidenced by the fact that both
                  astronauts are using
                  the high colling setting - Jack falls while trying to
                  pick up a chip he
                  has broken off one the boulders. | 
| 165:36:33 | Spectacular fall | While running cross
                  slope to
                  limit his downslope speed, caught his trailing left
                  foot on a small
                  mound or crater rim and started to fall.  He was
                  able to control
                  the fall and ended up on his hands and knees. 
                  Once he gets his
                  feet downhill, he pushes back to get his
                  center-of-mass over his knees
                  and rises without difficulty.  In 1992, Schmitt
                  commented that, by
                  this third EVA, they had a great deal of
                  confidence  and didn't
                  worry much about falling.  Presumably, they were
                  confident in the
                  suits and in their ability to get up when they did
                  fall.  They
                  also knew they would fall slowly in 1/6th-g and that,
                  in the absence of
                  large rocks, the surface was soft. | 
| 166:00:29 | Working on a slope | Because Jack's seat in
                  on the
                  downhill side of the slope at Station 6, Gene decides
                  to drive the
                  Rover to a more level spot and let Jack get in his
                  seat there. | 
| 167:33:28 | Minor fall; difficulty
                  getting up from awkward position | At Station 8, Gene
                  parked facing
                  mostly uphill but, apparently, with his side slightly
                  uphill and Jack's
                  slightly downhill.  When Gene tries to jump into
                  his seat at the
                  end of the stop, he falls and is pinned by the slope
                  against the Rover,
                  possibly with his feet uphill.  Gene needs Jack's
                  help in getting
                  up and has him push back on his helmet. | 
| Ground Elapsed Time (hhh:mm:ss) | Type or circumstance | Notes | |
| Apollo 15 | |||
| 144:27:45 | Help from LMP | After Dave's fall on the
              steep,
              inner wall of the Station 6 crater, he gets on his hands
              and knees with
              his weight primarily on his left knee, which is almost on
              the crater
              rim, and his left hand, which he has planted just in front
              of his left
              knee.  Dave's right knee is slightly downslope and he
              holds out
              his right hand for Jim's help.  Jim gets in position
              in front of
              Dave with his right foot forward and well planted, his
              right knee
              slightly flexed, and his left leg well back.  Jim
              extends his
              right hand and holds his arm steady so Dave can use Jim
              for
              leverage.  Dave starts to rise, scrambling forward
              and Jim moves
              back to get Dave on the level surface outside the rim. | |
| Apollo 16 | |||
| 121:21:21 | Two kneeling events | 
 | |
| 121:29:52 | Getting up using 10-20 cm
              of
              drill stem as a support | Charlie falls off-camera
              while
              trying to remove the wrench.  Fendell pulls back on
              the TV zoom
              and finds Charlie on his hands and knees.  He has his
              right hand
              on the 10-20 cm of drill stem sticking out of the
              ground.  He
              pushes himself up slightly with his right hand,
              maintaining his grip on
              the stem, and pulls his knees forward until they are under
              his
              chest.  He rises from that position, letting the
              internal pressure
              of the suit do some of the work and pushing himself up and
              forward with
              his feet somewhat like a sprinter coming out of the
              starting blocks. He
              runs forward until he has his feet under his
              center-of-mass.  This
              is a side view. | |
| 121:37:04 | Rising using the chest-high
              drill stem for support | Charlie uses the drill stem
              for
              support as he drops to his knees, gripping it with his
              right
              hand.  In getting up, he maintains his grip and seems
              to let the
              suit do more of the work that in the previous
              example.  Once he is
              part way up, he shifts his weight onto his right foot
              forward and
              pushes up and forward with that leg while he moves his
              left leg
              forward.  He moves forward a step or two to get his
              feet under his
              center-of-mass.  This is a front view. | |
| 121:43:36 | Rising by leaning or
              pushing back | Charlie got the
              treadle-and-jack
              off the Rover for removal of the deep core.  Almost
              off-camera, he
              knelt next to the knee-high stem, probably to remove the
              wrench, and
              may have used the wrench as support in getting down. His
              back is
              vertical.  Once he has the wrench off, he leans back
              until his
              center-of-mass is well behind his knees and rises much
              more easily than
              in the prior two examples, with no running forward to
              regain balance | |
| 121:53:10 | Rising by pushing back with
              the
              hands | After saving himself from a
              fall
              in his attampt to grab a rock off the surface, Charlie
              goes to his
              knees and then rotates forward onto his hands.  One
              he has the
              rock, he pushes back a little a tries to run forward under
              his
              center-of-mass.  He doesn't make it and falls onto
              his hands and
              knees.  He then pushes back hard and once his weight
              is well
              behind his knees, rises without difficulty.  This is
              the standard
              technique. | |
| 149:11:49 | Difficulty rising from
              hands and
              knees | After the penetrometer
              unexpectly - and rapidly - sinks to full depth, Charlie
              starts to fall
              and catches himself with his right hand.  He ends up
              on his hands
              and knees.  On his first attempt to get up, he has
              his weight on
              his hands and toes and, when he pushs with his hands to
              get his torso to
              rotate up and back, the fact that he didn't have his knees
              in solid
              contact with the ground defeats the effort.  On his
              second
              attempt, he gets all his weight on his hands, kicks his
              feet up and, as
              they come down, pushes up with his hands.  His chest
              rises about a
              meter or so off the ground and, at that point, he tries to
              run forward
              to catch himself.  He doesn't make it and falls
              forward.  On
              his third attempt, he lowers his chest to the ground and,
              although he
              has little weight on his knees, push back hard enough that
              his
              center-of-mass rotates back far enough that he can spring
              upright.  Charlie is not yet proficient in getting up
              from his
              hands and knees. | |
| 149:13:27 | Getting up from an erect
              kneeling position | The penetrometer goes to
              full
              depth again, but more slowly.  Charlie ends up on his
              knees but
              with his hands still on the penetrometer.  He then
              leans back
              until the bottom of his PLSS is touching his heels and
              holds that
              position for  a few seconds and wonders if he'll be
              able to get
              up.  He decides to try, bounces on his knees slightly
              and has no
              trouble standing.  He is learning to use the suit and
              the weakness
              of lunar gravity. | |
| Apollo 17 | |||
| 120:57:05 | Using the core stems as a
              crutch | After a second session of
              jacking the deep core out of the ground, Gene stands to
              rest, using the
              waist-high core stem as a support in getting up.  He
              has been
              working hard. | |
| 121:00:59 | Getting up from hands and
              knees
              with Gene's help | After Jack spectacular fall at the deep core, he ends up on his hands and knees. Although Jack is mostly hidden by Gene, he can see that his knees are bent no more than 60 degrees. As he gets to his feet we can see Gene's right hand on Jack helmet near the top of the visors. Gene may have been pushing back on Jack's head to help him up. This may be what Jack will do to help Gene up from his fall against the side of the Rover at Station 8 at 167:33:28. | |
| 123:13:03 | Getting up from hands and
              knees | On his way back to the LM,
              Jack
              got on hands and knees to inspect a partially buried
              boulder.  On
              his second try, he is able to push his center-of-mass far
              enough back
              that he can hop to his feet. | |
| 145:27:50 | Jack gets up from hands and
              knees with his feet somewhat downslope | Before retrieving the dropped scoop, Jack kicks it to his right so that, when he drops to his hands and knees, his feet will be downslope of the scoop, perhaps in a small crater. This will give him leverage when he pushes back off his hands to rotate his center-of-mass far enough back that he can stand. | |
| 165:36:33 | Getting up from hands and
              knees
              on a slope | After Gene's spectacular
              fall at
              Station 6, he ends up on his hands and knees.  He
              turns himself
              until his feet are downslope, pushes back with his hands
              and, once his
              center-of-mass is far enough back, hops to his feet. 
              Because of
              the slope, he doesn't have to push hard with his hands nor
              rotate his
              PLSS quite as far back. | |
| 167:02:22 | Three tries to get up from
              hands
              and knees | While Fendell was following
              Gene
              with the TV, Jack got on hands and knees to examine the
              Station 8
              boulder.  After Gene returns, we see Jack take threee
              tries to
              push him self back far enough that he can stand. 
              Good TV. 
              Two minutes later, Gene gets on hands an knees so he can
              turn the
              boulder over.  It takes him two tries to get
              up.  Because he
              has his back to the Rover, we don't get as good a view of
              the mechanics
              of getting up. | |