Though it it seemed to be just a corroded
lump of some sort when it was found in a shipwreck off
the coast of Greece near Antikythera in 1900,
in 1902 archaeologist Valerios
Stais, looking at the gear embedded in it, guessed that what we now
call the “Antikythera mechanism” was some kind of astronomy-based clock.
He was in the minority—most agreed that something so sophisticated must
have entered the wreck long after its other 2,000-year-old artifacts. Nothing like
it was believed to have existed until 1,500 years later.
In 1951, British historian Derek J. de Solla Price
began studying the find, and by 1974 he had worked out that it was, in fact, a
device from 150 to 100 BC Greece. He realized it used meshing
bronze gears connected to a crank to move hands on the device’s face in
accordance with the Metonic cycle, the
235-month pattern that ancient astronomers used to predict eclipses.
By 2009, modern imaging technology had identified
all 30 of the Antikythera mechanism’s gears, and a virtual model of
it was released.
Understanding how the pieces fit goes together
confirmed that the Antikythera mechanism was capable of predicting the positions
of the planets with which the Greeks were familiar—Mercury, Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn—as well as the sun and moon, and eclipses.
It even has a black and white stone that turns to show the phases of
the moon. Andrew Carol, an engineer from Apple, built a (much bigger) working
model of the device using Legos to
demonstrate its operation.
In June of 2016, an international team of experts
revealed new information derived from tiny inscriptions on the
devices parts in ancient Greek that had been too tiny to read—some of its
characters are just 1/20th of an inch wide—until cutting-edge
imaging technology allowed it to be more clearly seen. They’ve now read about
35,00 characters explaining the device.
Petros Giannakouris/Associated Press
The writing verifies the Antikythera mechanism’s
capabilities, with a couple of new wrinkles added: The text refers to upcoming
eclipses by color, which may mean they were viewed as having some
kind of oracular meaning. Second, it appears the device was built
by more than one person on the island of Rhodes, and that
it probably wasn’t the only one of its kind. The ancient
Greeks were apparently even further ahead in their astronomical
understanding and mechanical know-how than we’d
imagined.
Moon light was very important for defense and offense in war and tracking and navigation
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