1967 Original Expo 67 Poster - Switzerland Times, Visit the Swiss Pavilion - Atomic Clock
1967 Original Expo 67 Poster - Switzerland Times, Visit the Swiss Pavilion - Atomic Clock
1967 Original Expo 67 Poster - Switzerland Times, Visit the Swiss Pavilion - Atomic Clock
1967 Original Expo 67 Poster - Switzerland Times, Visit the Swiss Pavilion - Atomic Clock
1967 Original Expo 67 Poster - Switzerland Times, Visit the Swiss Pavilion - Atomic Clock

1967 Original Expo 67 Poster - Switzerland Times, Visit the Swiss Pavilion - Atomic Clock

Prix régulier $500.00
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Date: 1967
Size:
18 x 16 inches

About this poster:
A wonderful poster from Montreal's Expo 67 designed to highlight the Swiss development of an 'atomic clock'. 

The 1967 Expo publication explains the clock this way, "A Swiss phenomenon of the space age, the atomic clock, renders obsolete the quaint hourly call of the cuckoo, not to mention most other clocks and watches. And befitting the space-age phenomenon that is Expo, this atomic clock keeps time for the entire fair.

On the 1,000-acre site, twelve handsome three-sided clock towers and 50 other clocks in pavilions and other buildings give the official Expo time, fed by electronic impulses distributed from the Time Centre in the Swiss Pavilion. The heart of the Time Centre is the Oscillatom, as the atomic clock is officially known.

This timekeeping device is activated by the vibrations of an atom of cesium, costs $20,000, and is accurate to the incredible degree of one-millionth of a second in 3,000 years. You have no excuse for being late for an appointment within Expo.

The Watchmakers of Switzerland, an industry group, are responsible for the entire Time Centre exhibit on the second floor of the Swiss Pavilion. One spokesman admitted that the Oscillatom has been developed for much more painstaking demands than Expo's timekeeping. Such clocks — there are four existing ones and ten more being built — are intended to play major roles in future research into jet travel and space, because of their ability to observe time data sent by satellites and to transmit high-precision signals for the world's observatories.

The Time Centre exhibit also displays a representative array of mechanical and electronic timepieces ranging from prize-winning watches to quartz clocks, deck watches to marine chronometers. A continuously-running colour film explains how the Swiss industry makes its fifty million watches a year.

However, to show that the development of the Oscillatom has not obliterated all beloved tradition, two of the official Expo clocks are not in the familiar contemporary design of black metal with white face. At La Ronde's Pioneerland-Fort Edmonton section, the official time is kept by charming grandfather clocks."

This rare poster has minor wear, including some creasing. Please see photos. Highly collectable. Ready to frame.