LiveScience has an article that gives predominately metric units . 

Fair-use excerpt: 



"Based on the measurements, the team estimated about 100 kilograms of water in 
the view of their instruments — the equivalent of about a dozen 2-gallon 
buckets — in the area of the impact crater (about 80 feet, or 20 meters across) 
and the ejecta blanket (about 60 to 80 meters across), Colaprete said. 




I'm pretty impressed by the amount of water we saw in our little 20-meter 
crater, Colaprete said. " 




Source: http://is.gd/4W3M6 




I wish that the news media would at least gradually up their metric usage. I 
have personally converted myself to metric -- even though I get strange looks 
from family and friends when discussing things in metric. 





Prosper! 







-----Thanks!----- 
Cole Kingsbury 
-------------------- 

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Carleton MacDonald" <carlet...@comcast.net> 
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <usma@colostate.edu> 
Sent: Sunday, November 15, 2009 8:05:32 PM GMT -08:00 US/Canada Pacific 
Subject: [USMA:46171] RE: Moon water 




Yup, the Washington Post dumbed it down too. 



Carleton 





From: owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf Of 
Harry Wyeth 
Sent: Sunday, November 15, 2009 22:51 
To: U.S. Metric Association 
Subject: [USMA:46170] Moon water 



I suppose I am not the only one who noticed the press articles re the amount of 
water found on the moon as "26 gallons". Obviously, the NASA guys calculated 
100 L. 

HARRY WYETH

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