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The only camera that's been to the Moon and back was just sold for nearly $1m

Most devices were abandoned on the moon to save weight - this one had a lucky escape thanks to a jammed cartridge

James Vincent
Monday 24 March 2014 17:31 GMT
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Hasselblad 500 was used on the Moon during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971
Hasselblad 500 was used on the Moon during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971 (Galerie Westlicht)

The only camera to ever make it to the Moon and back has been sold at auction for just under $1m - or roughly £600,000.

All the other cameras used in the Moon landings were abandoned on the lunar surface to avoid carting extra weight back home (more rock samples could be taken back instead), and the astronauts simply removed the film from the devices before they skipped town.

This particular Hasselblad 500 was used on the Moon during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971. The only reason it avoided lunar abandonment was that the film got jammed and James Irwin (the astronaut who was using it) simply decided to take the whole thing back with him instead.

The Hasselblad wasn’t the first camera to go to the Moon (that would be the one taken by Neil Armstrong during the first lunar landings in 1969) but as the only one that’s ever made it back to Earth it is entirely unique.

A picture taken of astronaut Gene Cernan aboard the Lunar Rover during the Apollo 17 landings.

Like other cameras used on the Moon it was also modified to handle lunar conditions. This meant simply painting it silver to reflect sunlight and keep it cool, and stripping away the majority of switches and toggles on the camera's body to make it easier to handle by astronauts wearing clumsy, pressurized gloves.

The historic device was sold to Japanese businessman Terukazu Fujisawa, who is – rather fittingly – the founder of the Yodobashi Camera retail chain.

Fujisawa paid €550,000 for the Hasselblad in a hotly contested auction in Vienna. The expected going price was nearer to €200,000, but along with the fees for the auction house the total cost was €660,000 – or just over $910,000.

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