MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Amazon CEO pulls Apollo engines from ocean floor

Mar 20, 2013, 12:08 PM | Updated: 1:07 pm

An expedition led by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos pulled up Apollo's engines from the ocean floor. The team is now headed back to Cape Canaveral. (bezosexpeditions.com)

(bezosexpeditions.com)

Two mammoth rocket engines that helped boost Apollo astronauts to the moon have been fished out of the Atlantic.

An expedition led by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos pulled up the engines and is headed back to Cape Canaveral, Fla., after three weeks at sea.

Bezos and NASA announced the recovery on Wednesday.

“We’re bringing home enough major components to fashion displays of two flown F-1 engines,” Bezos wrote on the Blue Origins website.

The sunken engines were part of the mighty Saturn V rocket used to fly astronauts to the moon during the 1960s and 1970s. After liftoff, they fell into the ocean as planned.

Bezos wrote in depth about the images of the debris scattered across the ocean floor.

“The buoyancy of the ROVs (Remotely Operated Vehicles) looks every bit like microgravity. The blackness of the horizon. The gray and colorless ocean floor.”

The engines are the property of NASA. The space agency congratulated Bezos on his efforts. The team planned to restore the artifacts for later display.

Bezos’ space company, Blue Origins, has a NASA contract to develop a private space taxi to the International Space Station.

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

MyNorthwest News

Sue Bird #10 of the Seattle Storm looks on during warm ups before the game against the Los Angeles ...

Heather Bosch

Storm announce the return of Sue Bird 

Seattle basketball legend Sue Bird is returning to the WNBA Storm -- as an owner, the team's ownership group Force 10 Hoops announced.

1 hour ago

General view of some 500 cars parking inside the new Hybrid and PHEV Vehicles Stellantis Group eDCT...

Bill Kaczaraba

Electric vehicle rebates coming this summer for Washingtonians

Washington motorists will get an opportunity to benefit from new state rebates for electric vehicles (EVs) starting this summer.

2 hours ago

Photo: Sextortion is a growing trend but Meta is taking steps to stop it....

Micki Gamez

Sextortion is trapping our teens but one major company is working to stop it

Sextortion is a recent online phenomenon that is considered image-based sexual abuse and Psychology Today calls it a worldwide crisis.

2 hours ago

Photo: King County deputies are looking for this jeep....

James Lynch

King County deputies searching for suspected hit-and-run jeep

King County deputies are looking for a jeep believed to be connected to a hit-and-run that happened in White Center.

3 hours ago

Michelle Gutierrez, organizer with Service Employees International Union joined with the Denver Pos...

Sam Campbell, KIRO Newsradio and Bill Kaczaraba, MyNorthwest

More freedom for Washington workers as noncompete contracts are challenged

The Federal Trade Commission has swung its regulatory hammer, striking down nearly all non-compete agreements.

6 hours ago

boeing q1 loss...

Frank Sumrall

Boeing posts $355 million loss in Q1 after series of company crises

"We are in a tough moment," Boeing CEO David Calhoun said as the company announced a $355 million loss in 2024's Q1.

10 hours ago

Amazon CEO pulls Apollo engines from ocean floor