Jules Verne's Lunar Flyby — Projectile Spacecraft Near the Moon, 1870s
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Jules Verne's Lunar Flyby — Projectile Spacecraft Near the Moon, 1870s

A cannon-fired projectile spacecraft — Verne's revolutionary concept of ballistic space travel — drifts tiny and insignificant in the lower left as it skims past a dramatically close, cratered Moon dominating the composition. The lunar surface is rendered with extraordinary geological imagination: crystal formations, volcanic craters, globular mineral deposits, and jagged ridges suggest an alien world of eerie beauty. The star-filled void of space frames the encounter with brooding grandeur in this masterwork of 19th-century scientific illustration.

Category: Book Illustration
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Artist: H. Lojmann
Era: Victorian (1837-1900)
Decade: 1870s
Country: France
Coolness: 5/10

It's not blasting aliens or bug-eyed monsters, but that tiny bullet-ship floating past a GIGANTIC moon gives me chills — those explorers inside must be terrified! The crystals and craters make it look like the Moon is alive with strange minerals nobody's ever touched.

Text in image:

H. Lojmann

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