I'm getting slightly suspicious about the assumptions as to what was available 2000 years ago, the remarkable Antikythera Mechanism points to some technologies of 2000 years ago being almost up to medieval European standards. Clearly Antikythera indicates there were a few stunning items around, the fact that there is virtually no trace remaining of anything else indicates the technology was very rare in its own time but its hard to imagine a mechanisim like this being invented from nowhere to solely to make one item and not pointing to small numbers of other intricate instruments being made. The people who made the Antikythera Mechanism would surely have been motivated to attempt timekeeping, Antikythera shows a competent technology had been developed, we are very lucky to have any evidence after 2 millenia of such a rare device. Links:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6191462.stm http://www.math.sunysb.edu/~tony/whatsnew/column/antikytheraI-0400/kyth1.htm l http://www.math.sunysb.edu/~tony/whatsnew/column/antikytheraII-0500/diff1.ht ml > Returning to a more time-nuts-y topic.. > > What sort of time measurement accuracy would folks 2000 years > ago have had? > > For instance, were they aware of the (relative) constancy of > the swings of a pendulum of constant length? > > I remember stories from school about Galileo using his pulse > as a clock. They're probably apocryphal, and I would think > that he would have easy access to other things that tick once > a second or there abouts (dripping water, etc, if not swings > of a pendulum). > > I'm also familiar with the famous Shakespearean anachronism > of the striking clock in "Julius Caesar", and the usual > commentary says the Romans had only sundials and clepsydra. > So how good is a clepsydra? What if we go back a 1000 years? > > _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
