Rank 65 documents Apollo 15 — the first J-mission that transformed Apollo from landing demonstrations into serious lunar science. Launched 26 July 1971 aboard Saturn V SA-510, David Scott, James Irwin, and Alfred Worden carried the first Lunar Roving Vehicle to Hadley–Apennine. Falcon LM landed 30 July at Hadley Base; Scott and Irwin conducted three EVAs totalling 18 h 35 m, driving the LRV 27.9 km across the rille edge and Apennine slopes — the longest lunar surface operations yet. Scott performed the famous hammer-and-feather gravity demonstration at the end of the final EVA, confirming Galileo's principle live on the Moon. Worden performed a deep-space EVA from Endeavour to recover film cassettes and deployed the first subsatellite from lunar orbit. The mission returned 77 kg of samples including the Genesis Rock. Wallimilist renders the LRV at Hadley Rille, Falcon LM on slope, rille chasm foreground, and foil APOLLO 15 title exactly as the master PNG dictates — J-mission kicker, 1971 lunar palette, and curator copy on the first Moon car and extended science traverse.