Addendum:
Inventory of City of
Originated at The
Buhl Planetarium and
Institute of Popular
Science,
Moved to The
2005 June
30
The
following is an inventory of assets, originated at The Buhl Planetarium and
Institute of Popular Science. These assets were moved to The
Assets
Transferred Under Terms of Three Memoranda of Understanding Dated 2002 October
25 – Dismantled
and placed in storage in The Carnegie Science Center’s Miller Building
Warehouse:
1) Zeiss II Planetarium
Projector – Prior to dismantling, oldest
operable major planetarium projector in the world !
2) Planetarium Projector
Control Console
3) 10-inch Siderostat-type
Refractor Telescope – Prior to dismantling, second largest Siderostat Telescope
in operation in world !
4) Mercator’s Projection
Map of the World – When first assembled for the 1939 World’s Fair in New York
City, it was considered the largest such map in the world !
Assets Moved to
The
1)
4-Inch Zeiss Terrestrial Refractor Telescope (Currently used during “Observatory SkyWatch”
sessions, usually on clear Saturday evenings, on the fifth floor of The
Carnegie Science Center) --Buhl Planetarium’s very first telescope. Has unique
history, due to purchase just prior to onset of World War II. Terrestrial
Refractor Telescope was sent to
2) Meteorites -- 746-Pound (340 kg) Iron-Nickel Meteorite, Fifth largest fragment (Currently on public display near the entrance of
the Henry Buhl, Jr. Planetarium, Carnegie Science Center) from the Barringer Meteor Crater near
3) Van de Graaff Electrostatic Generator (and brass railing which previously
encircled generator) --
Medium-sized model (not
large Van de Graaff purchased in the late 1980s)
( More )
Addendum: City Assets from Buhl Planetarium 2005 June 30 Page
2 of 2
4) Buhl Planetarium’s Hall of the
Universe included twenty-one classic, "push-button" display case
exhibits (Astronomy: eighteen exhibits; Meteorology: three exhibits). The
following five Astronomy exhibits are documented as being in Buhl Planetarium’
s, originally-titled, Hall of Astronomy,
on the date of building dedication:
a) Stars do Move – Demonstrating precession, with changes in the star configuration of the Big Dipper
over 200,000 years of time as an example.
b) Twin Stars – Showing movement of a binary star
system.
c) Light Takes Time to Travel – Regarding the speed of light.
d) Tycho Brahe’s Mural Quadrant - Animated Diorama of Tycho Brahe's Observatory in
e) Observatory of Hevelius at
5) Eight Astronomical
Paintings by
a) The Dragon
b) A Perspective in Time
c)
Orion and Taurus the
Bull
d)
The Old Astronomer (A photograph of this
painting has been published in Astronomy textbooks, as well as in a 1961
black-and-white filmstrip for schools called "The Race for Space.")
e)
Cygnus the Swan
f)
Nine Planets and A Million Suns
g)
The Great Bear
h)
Copernicus (Portrait
of Polish Astronomer Nicholas Copernicus. Commissioned by the Polish Arts
League of Pittsburgh; donated for Buhl Planetarium.)
6) Two Portraits of Henry
Buhl, Jr.
7) Portrait of Louise Buhl,
wife of Henry Buhl, Jr.
8) Fairbanks-Morse Planetary Weight Scale (Currently in public use near the entrance of the Henry Buhl, Jr.
Planetarium, Carnegie Science Center) -- Displays person's weight for the planets
Earth, Venus, Mars, and the Moon.
9) *Four
10) *Planetarium and Lecture Hall Sound Equipment
*Items with an asterisk [*] indicate that these pieces of equipment
or artifacts were in the building on the day of dedication, and hence, are City
property. However, these specific items are not the original equipment, but
replacements for the original City-owned equipment; apparently, Buhl
Planetarium management deemed it necessary to replace this original equipment.
Since this replacement equipment was deemed necessary for continued operation of
the institution [and, in the case of the Planetarium and Lecture Hall sound
equipment, was absolutely essential!], this replacement equipment is City
property.
gaw