Historic First: Artemis II Crew Becomes the First Humans to Witness the Orientale Basin in Its EntiretyBREAKING: In a stunning milestone for deep-space exploration, the Artemis II astronauts have captured the first-ever view of the Moon’s Orientale Basin with human eyes — seeing its complete, majestic structure for the first time in https://t.co/PDp5ThIn0L the Orion spacecraft swept past the lunar limb during its historic flyby, the crew photographed the entire basin in one breathtaking frame, with Earth hanging beautifully in the black void beyond.A 930-Kilometer Cosmic BullseyeThe Orientale Basin is one of the Moon’s most impressive geological features — a massive multi-ringed impact structure roughly 930 km (580 miles) across. Formed about 3.8 billion years ago by a colossal asteroid or comet strike, its concentric rings ripple outward like frozen waves from a stone dropped into a cosmic pond.The outermost Cordillera ring forms the dramatic outer rim, while inner rings (the Rook mountains) mark zones of dramatic crustal rebound and collapse after the initial impact. Because Orientale straddles the Moon’s near and far sides near the southwestern limb, it has always appeared severely foreshortened and partially hidden from Earth-based telescopes and earlier missions. Only now, from Orion’s unique vantage during the flyby, has the full scale and symmetry been revealed directly to human observers.The Shot of a LifetimeThe image was taken through an Orion window as the crew passed over the site at just the right moment — with perfect illumination highlighting every ridge, ring, and shadow. It’s not just a photo. It’s a pivotal new dataset that complements decades of orbital data from Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, GRAIL’s gravity maps, and earlier probes.Entering the Zone of SilenceAs Orion continues its trajectory around the Moon, the crew is now heading into the most isolated phase of the mission: loss of signal. For roughly 40 minutes, the bulk of the Moon will completely block all radio communication with Earth, leaving Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen in profound solitude on the far side.They are venturing where only a handful of Apollo astronauts have gone before — deeper into cislunar space, pushing the boundaries of human exploration farther than any crew since 1970.The Moon is yielding its secrets once again… and humanity is watching live.This is what returning to the Moon — and preparing for Mars — truly looks like.
While some Afrikaaners are spreading misinformation, here is what one is doing.
Every corporate leader in South Africa can learn a lot from Rassie Erasmus. I know, I keep saying.
The man has an almost instinctive compassionate grasp of our history, its complexities and contradictions. Yet, does not get caught up in the emotion of it all. He mixes his compassion with practical solutions that lead to the best possible outcome. He looks at the cracks of our fractured country and thinks, “How do I mould something greater out of these cracks?” And what better outcome than back-to-back World Cup victories?
He does not resist change. To him, it’s not a threat or something that dilutes what already exists. It’s an addition that makes the team better, stronger. (See what I did there?)
What sets him apart as a leader in this country, is that he does not assume someone from a different background knows less. Because he listens. Proper listening, not that typical corporate “nod-and-ignore” nonsense. For example, why do Black and Coloured kids lean toward the backline? He didn’t assume laziness or “lack of instinct”. He asked. He learned. Grew up kicking balls on dusty patches with no tackling bags?
He refuses to see that as an inconvenient problem to moan about, he sees it as context for him to work with, and turns hardships into edges. He stands in the fire with his team until they all forge something new and better.
For him, transformation is not just an inconvenient box-ticking exercise. It’s not about reluctantly meeting a quota or leaving players to sink or swim. His mindset is: How do I set up everyone to win? And boy, is he winning!
Corporate South Africa can learn a thing or 15 from him. In fact, Rassie should be running masterclasses in leadership. In fact, Rassie for President.
Tomorrow on #PowerTalk, @MbuyiseniNdlozi interviews the legendary Tracey Going who interviewed him when he was still a little bambino. Also, the Dr’s voice hasn’t changed that much.