Details
Vintage chromogenic print on fiber-based Kodak paper, numbered 'AS17-148-22727' in red on top margin on recto, with 'A Kodak Paper' watermarks on verso
8 x 10in. (20.3 x 25.4cm.)
Provenance
From the collection of Mike Acs
Special notice
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Lot Essay

Only this final Apollo mission saw the Earth fully illuminated. This iconic photograph taken through the 80mm lens from a distance of about 30,000 km was credited to Schmitt who took most of the photographs of the Earth on the way to the Moon but there is a possibility that Ronald Evans took it.

All Apollo flights were heavily scheduled down to the minute. At the time this photo was taken, none of the astronauts was scheduled to do so. Thus this photograph was taken quickly in a stolen moment.

The photograph was released by NASA on Christmas Eve, four years to the day after the Apollo 8 Earthrise, and the image soon became known as the “Blue Marble,” probably the most widely distributed image in history. Noteworthy NASA photo editors cropped the black sky of space to make the Earth appear bigger than originally captured on film by the astronauts.

Schmitt stated later, “this now famous picture of the Earth, taken from about 34,000 miles away [18,000 statute miles, actually], shows all of Africa, the continent of human origins and later migrations. [...] In spite of the personal motivations for the descriptions and photographs, when I took this picture, I could not help but be struck by the remarkable fact that humans from that now receding blue, green, red-yellow, and white globe could take such a picture. A new migration to places elsewhere in the solar system had begun. As a geologist, I also reflected on how much our Home Planet had endured over four and a half billion years of time, demonstrating a truly remarkable resilience to apparent diversity” (Jacobs, p. 126).

From the mission transcript before and after the sequence of “Blue Marble” photographs were taken with the 80mm lens:

005:03:10 Evans: Oh, I’ll change the lens now.
005:03:11 Overmyer (Mission Control): 17, Houston. It’s about 30 seconds from the (SIVB) evasive maneuver burn.
005:03:17 Cernan: Okay.
005:03:19 Evans: Here, Jack, can you see him (the discarded SIVB) good? Check the settings there. I took an f/22 stop.
005:03:51 Cernan: There it goes, Bob.
005:03:52 Evans: There it goes; finally. [...]
005:08:38 Evans: Houston, (Hasselblad) magazine November November is on about 123 right now. [...]
005:17:37 Schmitt: That view of the Earth for a rev there was something I was looking forward to and I was not disappointed.
005:17:49 Overmyer: That’s great, Jack. [...]
005:19:00 Cernan: Bob, Antarctica is what I would call effectively just a solid white cap down on the - South Pole. There’s definite contact between the continent and the water. But, as Ron said, most of the clouds seem to be, well very artistic, very picturesque - some in clockwise rotating fashion but appear to be very thin where you can, for the most part, kind of see through those clouds to the blue water below. [...]
005:21:07 Schmitt: Could you give us our distance from the Earth? [...]
005:21:24 Overmyer: 18,100 [nautical miles, 33,520 km], FIDO (Flight Dynamics Officer) says. [...]
005:21:27 Cernan: Okay. And I suppose we’re seeing as 100 percent full Earth as we’ll ever see; certainly as I’ve ever seen. It appears to be - it may be a little bit - a little bit of a terminator way out to the - well, to the east - out beyond Australia and beyond India. But beyond that it’s about 99 percent pure.
005:22:59 Cernan: Bob, it’s these kind of views - these kind of views that stick with you forever. [...]
005:25:56 Cernan: You know - and there’s no strings holding it up either. It’s out there all by itself. [...]
005:49:47 Overmyer (Mission Control): Did you get any pictures of that, Jack?
005:49:50 Schmitt: Oh, yes. We got some pictures earlier. I’m going to get another one here in a minute. I’ll tell you, if there ever was a fragile-appearing piece of blue in space, it’s the Earth right now.

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