Scientists
unlock mystery of 2,000-year-old computer
CBC
News - Nov 30 2006
Scientists
have unlocked the secret of an ancient device recovered from a Roman shipwreck,
saying the complex mechanism was used to track the movements of the stars and
moon.
The
machine, believed to be about 2,000 years old, was discovered in 1901 on a shipwreck
off the coast of the Greek island of Antikythera and embedded in rock. The strange
wheel-like device with complex gears had baffled researchers attempting to determine
its purpose.
But
a recent study in the journal Nature has revealed the device, known as the Antikythera
Mechanism, was actually a complex means of tracking the movements of astronomical
bodies for use in navigation.
A
team of researchers led by Mike Edmunds and Tony Freeth at Cardiff University
in Wales used X-rays to peer through the deposits covering the mechanism, to uncover
ancient script and clues on how the mechanism worked.
"This
device is just extraordinary, the only thing of its kind," said Edmunds in
announcing the results. "The design is beautiful, the astronomy is exactly
right. The way the mechanics are designed just makes your jaw drop. Whoever has
done this has done it extremely well."
The
researchers will be releasing their full findings of what they are regarding as
a 2,000-year-old computer at a two-day international conference in Athens on Thursday
and Friday.
Created
between 150 BC and 100 BC, the mechanism contained 37 gear wheels in a case of
wood and bronze in a contraption that resembled a clock. The gear wheels were
designed to track the movements of the sun and moon, and even track eclipses and
the irregular orbit of the moon. It may also have been able to follow some of
the planets.
Also
astonishing is the machine's use of a differential gear, a device known to have
been used in the 17th century but often speculated to have been invented years
earlier.
The
device is an arrangement of gears that permits the rotation of two shafts at different
speeds. It is most commonly associated in modern usage with automobiles, which
use a differential gear on their rear axle to allow different rates of wheel rotation
on curves. The intricacy of the device is also comparable to that of 18th-century
clocks.
'State
of the art in astronomy'
"I'm
very surprised to find a mechanical representation of this," Alexander Jones,
an astronomy historian who works at the University of Toronto, told Nature.
Jones
predicts the mechanism will have a profound impact on our view of the history
of science.
"This
was absolutely state of the art in astronomy at the time."
The
greater question puzzling scientists is how such a useful device could have disappeared
entirely from the archeological record, so much so that no record of anything
as complex appears for another 1,000 years. One explanation is that the recycling
of bronze in ancient times melted down older versions and caused any archeological
record to disappear.
But
as London Science Museum's curator, Michael Wright, told Nature in a subsequent
article, a more likely possibility is that the device or plans of the device migrated
in some form to the Muslim world after the fall of Rome, and reappeared years
later in Europe.
"I
find it as easy to believe that this technology survived unrecorded, as to believe
that it was reinvented in so similar a form," said Wright.
Edmunds
and Freeth worked alongside researchers from universities of Athens and Thessaloniki
and the National Archaeological Museum of Athens, where the more than 80 pieces
of the mechanism are being held in precisely controlled conditions.