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originally posted by: Dr1Akula
Btw I can read ancient Greek too (no need to deride), the mechanism was a sophisticated astronomical clock, (and not an astrology tool as some believe, the zodiacs are used to form the ''virtual'' sky map) why couldn't a machine like that, be also useful in navigation, since it was found on a ship?
I believe it was a multipurpose analog computer clock, it even calculated the timing of the Olympic Games among other calendar events.
originally posted by: jadedANDcynical
This device is one of the few genuine OOPARTs that even mainstream scientists can agree does not fit with what is known about the technology of the time im which it existed.
Whatever its purpose, nothing like it would appear for another 1,000 years; it's truly an object out of time.
originally posted by: Dr1Akula
Btw I can read ancient Greek too (no need to deride), the mechanism was a sophisticated astronomical clock, (and not an astrology tool as some believe, the zodiacs are used to form the ''virtual'' sky map) why couldn't a machine like that, be also useful in navigation, since it was found on a ship?
I believe it was a multipurpose analog computer clock, it even calculated the timing of the Olympic Games among other calendar events.
To determine a position on the Earth's surface, it is necessary and sufficient to know the latitude, longitude, and altitude. Altitude considerations can, of course, be ignored for vessels operating at sea level. Until the mid-1750s, accurate navigation at sea out of sight of land was an unsolved problem due to the difficulty in calculating longitude. Navigators could determine their latitude by measuring the sun's angle at noon (i.e., when it reached its highest point in the sky, or culmination) or, in the Northern Hemisphere, to measure the angle of Polaris (the North Star) from the horizon (usually during twilight). To find their longitude, however, they needed a time standard that would work aboard a ship. Observation of regular celestial motions, such as Galileo's method based on observing Jupiter's natural satellites, was usually not possible at sea due to the ship's motion. The Lunar Distance Method, initially proposed by Johannes Werner in 1514, was developed in parallel with the marine chronometer.
The Dutch scientist Gemma Frisius was the first to propose the use of a chronometer to determine longitude in 1530. The purpose of a chronometer is to measure accurately the time of a known fixed location, for example Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). This is particularly important for navigation. Knowing GMT at local noon allows a navigator to use the time difference between the ship's position and the Greenwich Meridian to determine the ship's longitude.
originally posted by: Hanslune
originally posted by: Klassified
a reply to: Hanslune
Probably what scientists will be saying about us 2000 years from now. Lol!
Yes far in the future some one will be claiming that we really had anti-gravity before it was invented in 2243 AD, teleportation, etc because they are spoken of in the writing of the times.
originally posted by: Wolfenz
But the Antikythera Mechanism to Some.. is like finding a Smart Phone in a world of Dial Up Phones ..
originally posted by: merka
originally posted by: Wolfenz
But the Antikythera Mechanism to Some.. is like finding a Smart Phone in a world of Dial Up Phones ..
Or perhaps finding a touch screen phone in a world of keypad phones?
Innovation always happen at some point. Its nothing magical. Humans are a little impressive that way.
The Antikythera device is also impressive, but at the end of the day its still just math, astronomy and mechanical cogs. The fact that it may be 100 years older than previously thought changes little - it only make it more likely that Archimedes may have played a part in its design.
But the Antikythera Mechanism to Some.. is like finding a Smart Phone in a world of Dial Up Phones ..
Or perhaps finding a touch screen phone in a world of keypad phones?
a plant-hopping insect found in gardens across Europe - has hind-leg joints with curved cog-like strips of opposing 'teeth' that intermesh, rotating like mechanical gears to synchronise the animal's legs when it launches into a jump. Read more at: phys.org...
Stars don't move in the sky (except for the regular apparent motion caused by Earth's rotation). That's why they were and are useful for navigation. Ancient celestial navigation was rudimentary and there was little necessity to determine longitude when navigating the Aegean and Mediterranean. Navigators memorized the position of stars, they didn't need a calculator to tell them where the stars would be. Want to go north? Head for Polaris.
I am not suggesting it worked like a marine chronometer or that it was used exclusively for navigation, but it could help with the way sailors where navigating using the stars at that time
originally posted by: Dr1Akula
a reply to: Hanslune
All I am trying to say is that the machine’s ''computing power'', would have enabled its user to generate astronomical tables with which navigators could calculate their position. I am not suggesting it worked like a marine chronometer or that it was used exclusively for navigation, but it could help with the way sailors where navigating using the stars at that time.
I could be wrong, but I believe it was used for various calculating applications including distance and position.
originally posted by: Dr1Akula
a reply to: Hanslune
All I am trying to say is that the machine’s ''computing power'', would have enabled its user to generate astronomical tables with which navigators could calculate their position. I am not suggesting it worked like a marine chronometer or that it was used exclusively for navigation, but it could help with the way sailors where navigating using the stars at that time.
I could be wrong, but I believe it was used for various calculating applications including distance and position.
It tells you when you are on one location of the planet? It tells you you're home?
Then at the time of completion, their would only be one site on the earths surface that would correspond to all the angles that were put in.
You still need to know the time of day but the mechanism had nowhere near the accuracy you may think it did.
Wouldn't that be the position that they were at, at that particular time. Just the one position on the Earths surface. Like angle of the moon is 20 degrees above the horizon, Jupiter 50 degrees which only occurs at sector five on the chart, once in the next eighteen years?
We compare the positions of Mars, as reconstructed by NASA with the Mechanism’s predictions over the middle seven retrogrades of Mars in the 1st Century BC—a period of about 13 years.86 Serious error spikes can be seen, amounting to nearly 38°—more than a zodiac sign—at the retrogrades. The deferent and epicycle theories, on which the mechanisms depended, might be regarded as an adequate first-order approximation but were completely inadequate for accurate prediction at the retrogrades, particularly for Mars.
In short, the Antikythera Mechanism was a machine designed to predict celestial phenomena according to the sophisticated astronomical theories current in its day, the the sole witness to a lost history of brilliant engineering, a conception of pure genius, one of the great wonders of the ancient world—but it didn’t really work very well!
And they had no idea how the clock works.
After all the cosmos is a big clock, it just happens that we live inside said clock.
originally posted by: douglas5
Inside different caves from around the world there are prehistoric paintings of society with graphic details of an unexpected nature—such as people wearing shirts, pants, boots, and hats.
www.theepochtimes.com...
New Dates Calculated for Greece’s Antikythera Mechanism
The highly complex machine may have been based on Babylonian arithmetical methods, and not Greek trigonometry, which didn’t exist in 205 B.C. Link