Lot Essay
Camille Flammarion (1842-1925) was a French astronomer best-known at the end of the nineteenth century for his book published in 1892 positing the speculation that life on Mars could not only exist but already be rife. From his observatory at Juvisy, which he founded in 1882, and his observatory balloon flights, he was able to draw up a detailed Mars globe. This was supposedly issued in a variety of sizes, but the 6-inch diameter version here offered is the most common. The globe was published in Brussels in 1892 by Louis Niesten, in 1903 in Berlin by H. Albrecht, and in Paris in 1897 by the prolific firm of Émile Bertaux, who flourished between about 1880 and 1900, and published globes by such leading French makers as Charles Dien and Edmond Dubail, and the Frederic Eichen navisphere, as well as globes issued under his own name. Little appears to be known of Eugène Michael Antoniadi, beyond his Greco-French ancestry, his involvement with this Mars globe, and his authorship of a book published in 1930 entitled La planète Mars.
END OF SALE
The Mapping Of Mars
by Peter J.K. Louwman, amateur astronomer, Louwman Collection of Historic Telescopes, Wassenaar, The Netherlands
The most familiar type of globe is the terrestrial one. Also familiar, but less common is the celestial. For a true globe collector it is most desirable, of course, to own a pair of these globes, identical in size, by the same maker.
For me, as an enthusiastic amateur astronomer, two even rarer types of globe have always attracted me: globes of the Moon and of Mars. Technically, these globes share many details with the terrestrial globe, but they offer some curious differences worth looking at.
A Moon globe that was published before the time of the "Space Age", for instance, shows us surface details as seen with the help of a telescope, of only one half of the Moon. The other half was left blank, because no surface details could be observed. This is due to the fact that the Moon, during its revolution around the Earth in one month it always presents the same side of its surface towards the Earth.
When the first spacecrafts made their voyages to, and later travelled around the Moon, the features of the hidden side could be charted. The first pictures of that part of the surface were successfully made by the Russian 'Luna 3" in October 1959.
This led to the production of Moon globes with all details of the entire surface by publishers in the U.S.A., Russia and elsewhere.
Ever since the discovery of the telescope, the surface of the planet Mars has been observed intensively. At first, only crude sketches of surface detail were all that could be achieved. Later on, with better telescopes and observing techniques, more and more details could be charted.
Unlike the Moon, Mars rotates in about 24½ hours and thus gradually presents its entire surface towards the Earth. Observations made at intervals enabled astronomers to compile maps of the whole surface. Consequently, it was possible to convert the surface details of the two-dimensional maps onto the three-dimensional surface of a sphere to create a Mars globe.
A further important difference between the Moon and Mars is that where the surface characteristics of the Moon are permanent, those of Mars change with time. The reason for this difference lies in the fact that Mars has an atmosphere and the Moon does not. Winds and dust storms on Mars constantly change the appearance of certain parts of its surface. Well-known temporary changes occur at the white-capped North and South poles, which change dramatically in size during the cycle of seasons of approximately 687 days. The polar caps consist of water ice and frozen carbon dioxide. In the summer season of the northern hemisphere, for instance, the cap on the North Pole shrinks to a very small area, while that of the South Pole increases. These changes are due to the evaporation and sublima-tion of carbon dioxide in particular. On modern Mars globes the polar caps are illustrated at their minimum size so that no surface features are hidden under the caps.
To modern astronomers, familiar only with the beautifully illustrated Mars maps compiled from the information gathered by Mars space missions, it might come as unexpected, perhaps even annoying surprise, that old maps and globes show the North Pole at the bottom and the South Pole at the top. The explanation for this representation lies in the fact that astronomical telescopes give an inverted image: 'up' and 'down' are viewed as 'down' and 'up'.
As a matter of fact all old astronomical books, maps and journal publications (until around 1960, but in some cases after that year also) always illustrate pictures of heavenly bodies upside-down. This is also the case with drawings, maps and photographs of stellar objects like stars and nebulae. Why bother to turn it around, astronomers reason, when the inverted image is the way one actually sees and observes it through a telescope?
To me, a Mars globe with the traditional astronomical orientation is very appealing. Recently, I was lucky enough to acquire one; this globe is a product of a tremendously interesting period in Mars research and I was very glad to add it to my private collection of astronomical objects of historical significance and cultural importance.
This Mars globe (see left) was made by Ingeborg Brun of Norway in about 1920. For the making of it, she used information that is entirely based on the work of the famous American astronomer Percival Lowell. Lowell built his observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona in 1895 and devoted much of his time and money to observing Mars and doing research on its canals, which were at that time very popular with the general public.
Unfortunately, Lowell's world-famous observations of the canals and of the supposedly seasonal growth of vegetation along these eventually proved to be caused by optical illusions. On modern pictures obtained by space probes nothing resembling 'canals' has ever been found, nor any clues to water on the planet's surface. Nor have the Mars landers found any additional clues.
Nevertheless, the research of Lowell and others, undertaken some 100 years ago now, belongs to a short but very fascinating period in astronomical research.
Gazing at my wonderfully detailed and exquisite Lowell Mars globe, keeps impressing me and helps me to understand this fascinating period of astronomy and the globe it produced.
END OF SALE
The Mapping Of Mars
by Peter J.K. Louwman, amateur astronomer, Louwman Collection of Historic Telescopes, Wassenaar, The Netherlands
The most familiar type of globe is the terrestrial one. Also familiar, but less common is the celestial. For a true globe collector it is most desirable, of course, to own a pair of these globes, identical in size, by the same maker.
For me, as an enthusiastic amateur astronomer, two even rarer types of globe have always attracted me: globes of the Moon and of Mars. Technically, these globes share many details with the terrestrial globe, but they offer some curious differences worth looking at.
A Moon globe that was published before the time of the "Space Age", for instance, shows us surface details as seen with the help of a telescope, of only one half of the Moon. The other half was left blank, because no surface details could be observed. This is due to the fact that the Moon, during its revolution around the Earth in one month it always presents the same side of its surface towards the Earth.
When the first spacecrafts made their voyages to, and later travelled around the Moon, the features of the hidden side could be charted. The first pictures of that part of the surface were successfully made by the Russian 'Luna 3" in October 1959.
This led to the production of Moon globes with all details of the entire surface by publishers in the U.S.A., Russia and elsewhere.
Ever since the discovery of the telescope, the surface of the planet Mars has been observed intensively. At first, only crude sketches of surface detail were all that could be achieved. Later on, with better telescopes and observing techniques, more and more details could be charted.
Unlike the Moon, Mars rotates in about 24½ hours and thus gradually presents its entire surface towards the Earth. Observations made at intervals enabled astronomers to compile maps of the whole surface. Consequently, it was possible to convert the surface details of the two-dimensional maps onto the three-dimensional surface of a sphere to create a Mars globe.
A further important difference between the Moon and Mars is that where the surface characteristics of the Moon are permanent, those of Mars change with time. The reason for this difference lies in the fact that Mars has an atmosphere and the Moon does not. Winds and dust storms on Mars constantly change the appearance of certain parts of its surface. Well-known temporary changes occur at the white-capped North and South poles, which change dramatically in size during the cycle of seasons of approximately 687 days. The polar caps consist of water ice and frozen carbon dioxide. In the summer season of the northern hemisphere, for instance, the cap on the North Pole shrinks to a very small area, while that of the South Pole increases. These changes are due to the evaporation and sublima-tion of carbon dioxide in particular. On modern Mars globes the polar caps are illustrated at their minimum size so that no surface features are hidden under the caps.
To modern astronomers, familiar only with the beautifully illustrated Mars maps compiled from the information gathered by Mars space missions, it might come as unexpected, perhaps even annoying surprise, that old maps and globes show the North Pole at the bottom and the South Pole at the top. The explanation for this representation lies in the fact that astronomical telescopes give an inverted image: 'up' and 'down' are viewed as 'down' and 'up'.
As a matter of fact all old astronomical books, maps and journal publications (until around 1960, but in some cases after that year also) always illustrate pictures of heavenly bodies upside-down. This is also the case with drawings, maps and photographs of stellar objects like stars and nebulae. Why bother to turn it around, astronomers reason, when the inverted image is the way one actually sees and observes it through a telescope?
To me, a Mars globe with the traditional astronomical orientation is very appealing. Recently, I was lucky enough to acquire one; this globe is a product of a tremendously interesting period in Mars research and I was very glad to add it to my private collection of astronomical objects of historical significance and cultural importance.
This Mars globe (see left) was made by Ingeborg Brun of Norway in about 1920. For the making of it, she used information that is entirely based on the work of the famous American astronomer Percival Lowell. Lowell built his observatory in Flagstaff, Arizona in 1895 and devoted much of his time and money to observing Mars and doing research on its canals, which were at that time very popular with the general public.
Unfortunately, Lowell's world-famous observations of the canals and of the supposedly seasonal growth of vegetation along these eventually proved to be caused by optical illusions. On modern pictures obtained by space probes nothing resembling 'canals' has ever been found, nor any clues to water on the planet's surface. Nor have the Mars landers found any additional clues.
Nevertheless, the research of Lowell and others, undertaken some 100 years ago now, belongs to a short but very fascinating period in astronomical research.
Gazing at my wonderfully detailed and exquisite Lowell Mars globe, keeps impressing me and helps me to understand this fascinating period of astronomy and the globe it produced.