Exhibit lets visitors touch real samples of moon rock
Luke Deal/BBCPeople will be able to touch real pieces of rock from the moon in a new exhibition.
A touring exhibition, titled The Moon: Meet Our Nearest Neighbour, is taking place at The Hold archives centre in Ipswich until 19 September.
Visitors can explore historical moments in lunar discovery, including the 1969 landings and the space race, while also learning about how the moon influences our natural environment.
Emily Shepperson, exhibitions and interpretations officer at Suffolk Archives, said the exhibition was surprising people as it was "not necessarily what you'd expect" from an archive.
Glow Inflatables
Luke Deal/BBCThe exhibition includes large inflatables of the moon and the Earth, as well as the other seven planets in our solar system.
"One of the real highlights are these real examples of moon rock that people can come and touch," Shepperson said.
"They are very tiny, as examples of moon rock are, and we've got an example of light type and dark type which, combined together, is what forms those patterns that we can see on the surface of the moon or when we say can you see a face on the moon.
"I think it really captures people's attention —this idea of where these examples you can get your hands on have come from.
"It's such a distant concept of travelling to the moon, but of course it is getting closer every day with different ideas of trips and tourism to the moon."
Suffolk Archives
Luke Deal/BBCVisitors can also learn about Alice Grace Cook, a pioneering female astronomer from Stowmarket, who in 1916 made history as one of the very first women to be elected a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society.
"Once you step inside the exhibition it gives you an idea of the range of different topics we're talking about," Shepperson continued.
"We're not just talking about the science of the moon, how it formed, what it's made of.
"We're also talking about how it influences our lives through history and right up to today and how it still informs our natural environment as well."
Do you have a story suggestion for Suffolk? Contact us below.
Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.
