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Related: Russian manned spaceship lands
MOSCOW, April 9 (Xinhua) -- The Soyuz space capsule
carrying Brazil's first astronaut Marcus Pontes and his U.S. and Russian
counterparts from the International Space Station (ISS), landed in Kazakhstan
early Sunday, space officials said.
Pontes, a 43-year-old air force officer and Brazil's
first astronaut who arrived at the station on April 1 along with a new ISS crew,
carried a series of scientific experiments during his nine-day stay on the
orbiting laboratory.
The Soyuz capsule touched down on schedule at 03:47
Moscow time(2347 GMT Saturday) about 50 km northeast of the town of Arkalyk, the
Mission Control outside Moscow said.
Pontes, seated in a chair outside the capsule, smiled
and gave a thumbs-up as he took off his spacesuit. He was handed a Brazilian
flag and a Panama hat that was pulled out of the capsule.
Fifteen Russian helicopters and planes as well as an
American flying hospital and vehicles were rush to the landing site.
The capsule was discovered by search teams soon after
its landing and, once out of the capsule, the astronauts were covered with a
blanket and served with hot tea to keep warm. They underwent medical checkup at
the landing site and are due to be flown to Moscow later in the day.
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