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&lt;/script&gt;</html><thumbnail_url>https://kyotographie-2025.kyotojournal.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/03/Kyoto-Journal-Cover_42MED.webp</thumbnail_url><thumbnail_width>1484</thumbnail_width><thumbnail_height>2000</thumbnail_height><description>The Lick Observatory, built atop Mt. Hamilton in California in the 19th century, sent seventeen expeditions around the world to photograph eclipses between 1889 and 1932.&#xA0; One expedition to the Los Bronces Mine in Chile captured the total eclipse of the sun on April 16th, 1893 on an 8&#x201D; x 10&#x201D; glass plate negative, beautifully rendering the solar corona. The plate was archived and forgotten until the photographer Linda Connor found it in a box in a dusty corner of the observatory around 1997.&#xA0; She made a contact print from the plate and toned it with gold chloride for permanence. Some of her prints of the 1893 eclipse are now [&hellip;]</description></oembed>
