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Discovery Crew Readies For Florida Landing

CAPE CANAVERAL (CBSMiami.com) - The space shuttle Discovery will leave the International Space Station Monday for an expected landing in Florida, but before they could leave they had to help take out the garbage.
The crews aboard the Space Station and Discovery worked together Saturday, taking out the trash and doing their part for clean air as their weeklong visit wound down.

The hatches between Discovery and the International Space Station will close Sunday afternoon, and the shuttle will undock first thing Monday. It is expected to land Wednesday at the Kennedy Space Center.
Both crews worked to rejuvenate the space station's air system. The oxygen generator as well as the carbon dioxide removal system have been acting up.
They also made sure a Japanese cargo carrier was loaded properly with garbage.
The supply ship will be let loose at the end of this month and plunge through the atmosphere, burning up.

The vessel is full of packing foam from all the equipment that was delivered by Discovery. The foam encasing the humanoid robot R2 will be stuffed-in as well, once the astronauts unwrap it.
R2 is the first humanoid robot in space. It was part of the new stowage unit delivered last Saturday by shuttle Discovery.
Mission Control gave Discovery's six astronauts two extra days at the 220-mile-high lab — for a total of nine days — to help with all the unloading and repair work.
"Hope you are enjoying your extended stay in your out-of-this-world accommodations. The innkeeper says you can stay a couple more days if you behave," Mission Control said as a  joke.
It is the last voyage for Discovery, NASA's oldest and most well-traveled shuttle. The spaceship will be retired following Wednesday's planned touchdown and sent to the Smithsonian Institution for display.
Only two more shuttle missions remain: Endeavour is set to soar in mid-April, followed by Atlantis at the end of June.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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