
Dominique Ciccolella
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![[Surveyor III] THE FIRST-EVER PHOTOGRAPH OF AN ECLIPSE OF THE SUN BY THE EARTH, TAKEN FROM THE MOON NASA, 24 April 1967 image 1](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25674427-6-1.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
![[Surveyor III] THE FIRST-EVER PHOTOGRAPH OF AN ECLIPSE OF THE SUN BY THE EARTH, TAKEN FROM THE MOON NASA, 24 April 1967 image 2](/_next/image.jpg?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimg1.bonhams.com%2Fimage%3Fsrc%3DImages%2Flive%2F2025-03%2F24%2F25674427-6-2.jpg&w=2400&q=75)
Sold for €281.60 inc. premium
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[NASA caption] SURVEYOR III — Both sunrise and sunset on Earth are seen in this photo of the Earth's disc passing across the sun as photographed from a vantage point on the moon. The picture was taken by Surveyor III's television camera at 3:24 a.m. PST during the April 24 eclipse. On the upper left side of the disc, the sun is setting over Asia and the Indian Ocean. The lower right edge shows sunrise over the southeast Pacific. At this stage of the eclipse, the Earth and sun are 42 minutes into the period of totality. The brightest portion of the lighted ring around the Earth is in the northwest quadrant of the Earth as viewed from the moon. This is the eastern portion of the Asian Continent.
Literature
Exploring Space with a Camera (NASA SP-168), Cortright, ed., p. 128
Watch more
CLICK HERE: Within this Decade: America in Space - 1969