
This auction has ended. View lot details
You may also be interested in


Lot 125
LUNAR ORBITER IV—OCEANUS PROCELLARUM & ENVIRONS
20 July 2016, 13:00 EDT
New YorkSold for US$3,125 inc. premium
Looking for a similar item?
Our Space History specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.
Find your local specialistAsk about this lot


Client Services (San Francisco)

Client Services (Los Angeles)
LUNAR ORBITER IV—OCEANUS PROCELLARUM & ENVIRONS
Together 2 sheets, each sheet made up of five 17 x 32 inch gelatin silver prints on vintage 1967 Kodak Paper from frame 4189, consisting of high res images 189 H1, H2, & H3. Each print watermarked "A Kodak Paper" on verso, and annotated in left margin with "IV 33D H-189 LF 127 G4-73". The two sheets, which are separately matted, framed and glazed, together form a 17 x 64 inch panorama.
Part of the suite of images taken by Lunar Orbiter IV of the Oceanus Procellarum and its immediate environs. Includes all 3 high resolution images from frame 189, comprising views of crater Respold (H3), craters Gerard, Bunsen, and Lavoisier (H2), and craters Aston, Ulugh Beigh, and Voskresenkiy (H1). The objective of Lunar Orbiter IV (LO4) was to provide an expanded photographic survey of the lunar surface, providing far higher resolution imagery than was available from ground based telescopes. Launched on May 4, 1967, LO4 completed 30 successive orbits and took 199 exposures which covered 99% of the lunar surface.
See Bowker & Hughes, Lunar Orbiter Photographic Atlas of the Moon, Washington D.C.: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1971.
Part of the suite of images taken by Lunar Orbiter IV of the Oceanus Procellarum and its immediate environs. Includes all 3 high resolution images from frame 189, comprising views of crater Respold (H3), craters Gerard, Bunsen, and Lavoisier (H2), and craters Aston, Ulugh Beigh, and Voskresenkiy (H1). The objective of Lunar Orbiter IV (LO4) was to provide an expanded photographic survey of the lunar surface, providing far higher resolution imagery than was available from ground based telescopes. Launched on May 4, 1967, LO4 completed 30 successive orbits and took 199 exposures which covered 99% of the lunar surface.
See Bowker & Hughes, Lunar Orbiter Photographic Atlas of the Moon, Washington D.C.: National Aeronautics and Space Administration, 1971.


