The second American to orbit the Earth and one of the last surviving original Mercury 7 astronauts has died.
Astronaut Scott Carpenter was 88. His wife, Patty Barrett, says Carpenter died of complications from a stroke in a Denver hospice.
As an astronaut and aquanaut who lived underwater for the US Navy, Carpenter was the first man to explore both the depths of the ocean and the heights of space.
Carpenter gave the famous send-off “Godspeed, John Glenn” when Glenn became the first American in orbit in 1962.
Three months later, Carpenter orbited the Earth three times. He lost contact with Nasa during the off-target landing but was found safely floating in his life raft 288 miles away.
Carpenter and Glenn were the last survivors of the original Mercury 7 astronauts from the “Right Stuff” days of the 1960s.
Nasa administrator Charles Bolden said Carpenter “was in the vanguard of our space programme the pioneers who set the tone for our nation’s pioneering efforts beyond Earth and accomplished so much for our nation.”