. Popular science monthly. eet in length, painted black with anet-work of white threads. Oppositethe shed was the camera-house, shownin the illustration, in which were 24 cameras, each having a lens 3-inches indiameter. The cameras were operatedelectrically by a motor clock, so thattwelve successive exposures could bemade in one fifth of a second. Insome cases three batteries of cameraswere arranged so that simultaneousviews from different positions were ob-tained. Thus in one of the pictureshere reproduced the stride of a walkinghorse is shown in 36 different photo-graphs, twelve successive p


. Popular science monthly. eet in length, painted black with anet-work of white threads. Oppositethe shed was the camera-house, shownin the illustration, in which were 24 cameras, each having a lens 3-inches indiameter. The cameras were operatedelectrically by a motor clock, so thattwelve successive exposures could bemade in one fifth of a second. Insome cases three batteries of cameraswere arranged so that simultaneousviews from different positions were ob-tained. Thus in one of the pictureshere reproduced the stride of a walkinghorse is shown in 36 different photo-graphs, twelve successive positionsbeing reproduced from three points ofview. There is similarly shown thefront and side views of movements inmaking a high jump. Instantaneouspictures of animal locomotion weresubsequently made by M. Marey inParis, who used a sensitized film, sothat a succession of pictures could betaken with a single lens. Mr. Edisonlater applied the film to the kinetoseopeand to projecting moving pictures on ascreen with a Building Showing Battery of Twenty-four Cameras. Photographic Camera Divided intoCompartments, each having a lens of thesame construction, and arranged to cor-respond with the compartments in theElectro Photographic Exposors. 5i6 TEE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookd, booksubjectscience, booksubjecttechnology