Astronaut Buzz Aldrin is being emergency evacuated from the South Pole
Google Maps
The National Science Foundation (NSF) announced Thursday morning that it will provide a "humanitarian medical evacuation flight" from the South Pole for an "ailing" Buzz Aldrin.
Aldrin was the second man to walk on the moon, joining Neil Armstrong in the Apollo 11 Lunar Module in July 1969. He has since become an author and advocate for crewed missions to Mars. He is 86, and no further information is available as to his condition.
Aldrin posted on Twitter Tuesday that he was headed to the South Pole, though it is unclear exactly when he arrived:
https://twitter.com/mims/statuses/803501192810823681
South Pole here I come! #antarctica #WhiteDesert #GYATAntarctica pic.twitter.com/PPjfmKvanZ
https://twitter.com/mims/statuses/803493887201443840
Buzz's Polar Penguins countdown to liftoff has commenced. #Antarctica #WhiteDesert pic.twitter.com/0vDc1yP0gT
The NSF's statement said that an NSF plane will fly Aldrin from the Amundsen-Scott research station at the South Pole to McMurdo Station on the Antarctic coast. At that point ski-equipped LC-130 cargo planes flown by the 109th Airlift Wing of the New York Air National Guard will haul him to New Zealand "as soon as possible."
It's the start of summer in Antarctica, when travel to Amundsen-Scott is relatively routine, if not cheap or easy.
During the winter, researchers at Amundsen are much more sealed-off from the world. Only three emergency evacuations have ever been attempted during those harsh, dark months, most recently this past June.
NOW WATCH: Listen to the haunting sounds astronauts heard on the far side of the moon