“LONG THE FINEST AND MOST COMPLETE”: PICKERING’S PHOTOGRAPHIC LUNAR ATLAS, 1903 FIRST EDITION
PICKERING, William Henry. The Moon: A Summary of the Existing Knowledge of Our Satellite, with a Complete Photographic Atlas. New York: Doubleday, Page, 1903. Folio, original blue cloth with mounted photographic illustration of the Moon on front cover.
First edition of Pickering’s photographic lunar atlas, with 100 plates.
"When Pickering began his work, three photographic atlases had been attempted, and all had encountered difficulties or criticism… Pickering decided to produce a systematic, affordable atlas, with every feature covered five times, under different angles of illumination. All the plates were to be at the same scale, and the same size as the original negatives. The photographs were taken in 1901 in Jamaica especially for this atlas. Pickering's atlas… was much more useful for the lunar observer, and it established the standards which most later atlases would follow" (William B. Ashworth, Jr., "The Face of the Moon: Galileo to Apollo. An Exhibition of Rare Books and Maps from the Collection of the Linda Hall Library," 1989; #32). "Pickering was a pioneer in dry-plate celestial photography, and the Harvard photographic sky survey was undertaken at his suggestion. He took some of the earliest photographs of Mars (1888), and the lunar photographs he obtained in Jamaica (1900) were long the finest and most complete' (DSB). Ex-libris Library Company of Philadelphia, with its bookplate, marked duplicate, and discreet embossed blindstamp to title page.
A bit of wear to spine ends and corners, text block expertly reinforced. An extremely good copy.