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Lot Essay
639 a Schmitt is removing his camera from the bracket on his chest and stowing it under his seat.
121:28:03 Cernan: (Consulting his checklist CDR-24) Okay, where are we? You got your camera, obviously. This is my camera. I’ll get the bag dispenser on it. (Pause) It’s not a bad day’s start. Bob, is the ALSEP working good? 121:28:16 Parker (Mission Control): The last we heard, it was working great, guys. We’ll check again, though. 121:28:22 Cernan: Okay. (Reading) You got your camera. My camera is in the floor pan. Cap dispenser (from) SCB-1 to Gate. Let me get that.
639 b Cernan is standing a little downhill just inside the lip of a crater with hammer and scoop in his hands, hitting the boulder and trying to collect fragments while Schmitt holds a sample bag in hand.
122:11:20 Schmitt: Go ahead. (Pause) Try hitting (the edge)...There you go. Can you use the other end against the right side of the rock? 122:11:30 Cernan: I’m (garbled). 122:11:32 Schmitt: Oh. 122:11:34 Cernan: It’s coming. (Pause) 122:11:42 Schmitt: That’s all right. 122:11:44 Cernan: I’ll get that one, wait a minute. 122:11:47 Schmitt: Be careful down in there. 122:11:49 Cernan: The whole thing is going to fracture off here, in a minute. Just want to...
639 c A frame from a panoramic sequence taken at station 1 near Steno Crater. Schmitt has the Hasselblad camera mounted on his chest. He is “shaking soil out of the rake to collect a sample of rocks ranging from 1 to 4 centimeters in diameter after making a swath through the surface soil” (ALSJ caption for AS17-134-20425). West and Old Family Mountain and the left side of the North Massif are in the background.
122:27:08 Schmitt: And, Bob, I’m really only penetrating about, at the most, 3 centimeters into this area with the rake. I’ve picked up a very good sample of boulders (fragments) but most of them were in that distance of the surface and projecting out of it. 122:27:28 Parker (Mission Control): Okay; I copy that. 122:27:31 Schmitt: You ready, Gene? 122:27:33 Cernan: A couple of more (pictures), Jack. (Pause) Okay, coming at you (with a sample bag). Bob, the pan is complete. I’ll give you a frame count shortly.
639 d A frame from a panoramic sequence taken at station 1 near Steno Crater. The rim of Steno is at the near right horizon but the crater itself is not visible. Rover tracks are in the foreground.
“Station 1 was located about 150 meters from the northwest rim of Steno Crater, in the middle of the Taurus-Littrow Valley. This station was originally planned for Emory Crater, which is southeast of the actual stop and about 2.5 kilometers from the LM. However, because of the extra time required for ALSEP experiments, the traverse was shortened to go only as far as Steno Crater” (https://www.lpi.usra.edu/lunar/missions/apollo/apollo_17/surface_opp/).
639 e “When Steno Crater formed, it would have ejected material from below the surface and deposited it in the surrounding region. The goal of this stop was to collect samples of this subsurface material” (http://www.lpi.usra.edu/lunar/missions/apollo/apollo_17/surface_opp/).
A view of the rake site after Cernan collected samples. The rake is partially visible at the left of the picture. Before taking the photograph, Cernan noticed that he had dust on his Hasselblad camera and made a joke about blowing it off (which is of course not a very useful thing to try when wearing a helmet).
122:30:00 Cernan: Well, I just can’t even read my camera anymore. I’ve got to learn how to control the dust. Okay, that’s in (Jack’s SCB). 122:30:06 Schmitt: Okay; you get the “after”? 122:30:07 Cernan: I tried to blow the dust off my camera!
639 f A frame from a panoramic sequence taken at Steno Crater’s station 1. The Sculptured Hills are in the background.
“Even low in the sky, the Sun was a force to be reckoned with, producing a surface temperature of 150°F during the 3-day ‘morning’ of the 14-day lunar day” (Reynolds, p. 205).
122:30:19 Parker (Mission Control): We’d like for you to get your second pan, Jack, and then we’ll press on. 122:30:27 Schmitt: Okay. (Pause) 122:30:33 Schmitt: I’ll get it over here (west of the Rover) where our two sample sites are in view. [...] 122:32:43 Parker: Okay. And, Jack, you got the pan or getting it? 122:32:50 Schmitt: Yes, sir. 122:32:53 Cernan: And, Bob, CDR is on frame count 60 (on the Hasselblad camera). [...] 122:33:08 Schmitt: And the LMP is on nine-five.
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The condition of lots can vary widely and the nature of the lots sold means that they are unlikely to be in a perfect condition. Lots are sold in the condition they are in at the time of sale.
Overall in very good condition with wear commensurate with age and use.
Please note that photographs in this sale are drawn from a variety of sources and include photographs used to prepare press articles. Condition will vary from lot to lot but some photographs may display signs of further handling including, but not limited to:
Nicks to edges; fading or yellowing; slight warping and creasing; light scruffs or scratches; small tears to margins; handwritten annotations in pencil or ink; captions affixed to verso; staining to verso; affixed labels or stickers; occasional hand retouching to press photographs, and cropped margins.
Most of these will be discernible from the catalogue images.
The mosaic panoramas are composed of multiple photographs attached together using adhesive. These may be trimmed to allow for correct registration of successive images within the panorama.
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