user posted imageThe barren Moon could become an astronomer's paradise, an ideal spot for telescopes and other devices to scope out the heavens as never before.Creating the lunar lookout is one proposal under review during the weeklong fifth gathering of the International Lunar Exploration Working Group (ILEWG) being held this week on the Kohala Coast, Hawai'i Island. Astronauts, scientists and engineers, as well as business people and entrepreneurs are sharing ways to convert the bleak Moon into a bustling, off-Earth continent for scientific research, technology testing, producing energy, even as practice ground for future expeditions to Mars.Representatives from various spacefaring nations, including China, India, and Japan are taking part in the event, seeking to develop global and inter-global partnerships to further a lunar exploration agenda."The Moon is the next logical step after the space station," said Steve Durst, ILEWG 5 Co-chair and head of Space Age Publishing Company.

"It is important that we become a multi-planet species…and that begins at the Moon."Durst said that this week's ILEWG get-together brings to the table interests of the six major spacefaring powers: the United States, Russia, Europe, Japan, China and India. "That's the big story of this gathering…the international nature of lunar exploration that's forming," he noted.

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