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On this episode of Dave Does History, we go back to July 20, 1976, a day that lit the fuse on a lifetime passion for space.
At just twelve years old, I watched as Viking 1 became the first American spacecraft to land safely on Mars. It wasn’t a movie. It wasn’t science fiction. It was real, and it was glorious.
Viking wasn’t just a piece of hardware. It was a question on legs, asking the Red Planet if anything lived there. Backed by Carl Sagan’s vision and NASA’s engineering brilliance, Viking 1 carried out experiments that sparked decades of debate.
Did we find life? Did we miss it?
In this episode, we explore the Viking program, the science it conducted, and the legacy it left behind. From a grainy image of a footpad in Martian soil to a universe of unanswered questions, this is the story of Viking 1.
On this episode of Dave Does History, we go back to July 20, 1976, a day that lit the fuse on a lifetime passion for space.
At just twelve years old, I watched as Viking 1 became the first American spacecraft to land safely on Mars. It wasn’t a movie. It wasn’t science fiction. It was real, and it was glorious.
Viking wasn’t just a piece of hardware. It was a question on legs, asking the Red Planet if anything lived there. Backed by Carl Sagan’s vision and NASA’s engineering brilliance, Viking 1 carried out experiments that sparked decades of debate.
Did we find life? Did we miss it?
In this episode, we explore the Viking program, the science it conducted, and the legacy it left behind. From a grainy image of a footpad in Martian soil to a universe of unanswered questions, this is the story of Viking 1.