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The FIRST permament image
1826: First Permanent Image
French inventor Joseph Nicéphore Niépce uses a camera obscura to burn a permanent image of the countryside at his Le Gras, France, estate onto a chemical-coated pewter plate. He names his technique "heliography," meaning "sun drawing." The black-and-white exposure takes eight hours and fades significantly, but an image is still visible on the plate today. -
first photo of a person
in early 1839, French painter and chemist Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre photographs a Paris street scene from his apartment window using a camera obscura and his newly invented daguerreotype process. The long exposure time (several minutes) means moving objects like pedestrians and carriages don't appear in the photo. But an unidentified man who stops for a shoeshine remains still long enough to unwittingly become the first person ever photographed. -
First Bird's-Eye View
Felix Tournachon, better known by the nom de plume Nadar, combines his interests— aeronautics, journalism, and photography— and becomes the first to capture an aerial photograph in a tethered balloon over Paris in 1858. -
First Color Photo
The enormously influential Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell creates a rudimentary color image by superimposing onto a single screen three black-and-white images each passed through three filters—red, green, and blue. His photo of a multicolored ribbon is the first to prove the efficacy of the three-color method, until then just a theory, and sets the stage for further color innovation, particularly by the Lumißre brothers in France. -
first action photo.
English photographer Eadweard Muybridge, using new emulsions that allow nearly instantaneous photography, begins taking photograph sequences that capture animals and humans in motion. His 1878 photo series of a galloping horse, created with 12 cameras each outfitted with a trip wire, helps settle a disagreement over whether at any time in a horse's gait all four hooves leave the ground. (They do.) It also causes a popular stir about the potential of cameras to study movement. Muybridge goes on t -
First Photo Published in National Geographic
The first photograph to appear in National Geographic is a relief map of North America. It appears in the magazine's third issue (Volume 1, Number 3, 1889). The first photograph of a natural scene—generally considered the first real photograph in the magazine—is of Herald Island, in the Arctic Ocean, taken from a ship and appearing in the March 1890 issue. -
first wildlife photo.
National Geographic begins its long, celebrated association with wildlife photography with its July 1906 issue. In a feature titled "Photographing Wild Game with Flashlight and Camera," the magazine publishes some 70 wildlife photographs by U.S. Rep. George Shiras, many taken at night using flash powder. The decision to publish the pictorial causes two board members to resign, protesting that "wandering off into nature is not geography." But Editor Gilbert H. Grosvenor later describes the piece -
first natural colour photo
The July 1914 issue of National Geographic magazine features its first Autochrome, or natural-color photograph—a flower garden in Ghent, Belgium. The magazine had used hand-colored images since November 1910. In April 1916, National Geographic becomes one of the first American publications to run a series of Autochrome color photographs. -
first underwater colour photo
Ichthyologist William Longley and National Geographic staff photographer Charles Martin use an Autochrome camera and a raft full of explosive magnesium flash powder to illuminate the shallows of Florida's Dry Tortugas and make the first undersea color photographs. The photos, which show reef scenes with fish, are published in the January 1927 National Geographic. -
First High-Altitude Photo
National Geographic teams up with the U.S. Army Air Corps for the record-breaking flight of Explorer II, a helium balloon with a hermetically sealed magnesium alloy gondola. The balloon takes off near Rapid City, South Dakota, and ascends 72,395 feet (22,066 meters) into the stratosphere, a world altitude record for manned flight. Captain Albert Stevens takes the first photograph showing the curve of the Earth and the first color photographs taken from the stratosphere.