59)ġ651 Grimaldi : 11 in map (used by Riccioli)ġ651 Riccioli 11 in map (by Grimaldi) with nomenclature on exhibit in Florenceġ659 Strauch : adaptation of map by Hevelius (also as folded insert, 1668)ġ660 Kircher : 12 in map (reproduction of Rheita's map?)ġ663 Praetorius : Crude map of "Lunar Spots" in Eine Astronomische Karteġ665 Kircher : 12 in map (reproduction of map by Divini)ġ665 Hooke : Detailed drawing of a crater in his Micrographia on exhibit in Florenceġ671 Lasséré (also known as Chérubin d'Orleans) : 11 in maps ( Whitaker, pp. The scroll in the upper left of both versions suggests they were drawn in 1645, although Selenographia was reportedly published in 1647.ġ649 Divini : (or "De Divinis") 19 in map on exhibit in Florenceġ651 Sersale (also known as " Sirsalis") : 34 cm map ( Whitaker, p. BMP version on the website of Robert Harry van Gent. A slightly different version apparently printed as a loose sheet.Scan of Hevelius' nomenclature map (Fig.1611 Harriot : sketches and map with numbers and letters (unpublished) on exhibit in Florence LPOD discussionġ612 Lagalla : published a book containing reprints of Galileo's engravingsġ614 Scheiner : 9 cm map of First Quarter Moon with letters in his Disquisitiones mathematicaeġ620 Biancani : 5 cm map of First Quarter with lettersġ627 Borri : 10 cm map of First Quarter with lettersġ629-30 Fontana : 10 cm maps, published in by Kircher in 1646ġ635-7 Mellan : 21 cm maps of First, Last Quarters and Full Moon prepared under direction of Gassendi and Peiresc on exhibit in Florenceġ644 Argoli : published a book with lunar drawings by Fontanaġ645 Langrenus : First major chart with nomenclature (see also crude 1910 reproduction, and copy of original on exhibit in Florence).ġ645 De Rheita : 18.4 cm map on exhibit in Florenceġ646 Fontana : 9.4 in maps showing Moon at many phasesġ647 Hevelius : Selenographia, Colored map 1600 Gilbert : Naked eye map of Moon with feature names found with manuscript copy of New Philosophy Concerning our Sublunar Word by William Gilbert (unpublished)ġ610 Galileo : First published images of the Moon by Galileo Galilei in his Sidereus Nuncius, and unpublished drawings thought to be related to itĬa. Entries flagged with a " (G)" were found in the draft Lunar Atlases and Maps section of the Bibliography to a yet-unpublished Moon book by Robert Garfinkle, and are added here by permission.ġ505-1508 Da Vinci : Three sketches (unpublished)Ĭa. ![]() See the Bibliography at the end of this page. Some of these are special maps that were not widely circulated and are not part of any of the NASA-generated series listed below.
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