Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Ancient calculator also used to tell fortunes, say researcher­s

- MICHELE KAMBAS

ATHENS: A 2 000- year- old astronomic­al calculator used by ancient Greeks to chart the movement of the sun, moon and planets may also have had another purpose – fortune telling, say researcher­s.

Heralded as the world’s first computer, the Antikyther­a Mechanism is a system of intricate bronze gears dating to around 60 BC, used by ancient Greeks to track solar and lunar eclipses.

It was retrieved from a ship- wreck discovered off the Greek island of Antikyther­a in 1901.

While researcher­s had previously focused on its internal mechanisms, a decades- long study is now attempting to decode minute inscriptio­ns on the remaining fragments of its outer surfaces.

“It confirms that the mechanism displayed planets as well as showing the position of the sun and the moon in the sky,” said Mike Edmunds, astrophysi­cs professor from the University of Cardiff in Wales who is part of the research team.

But in creating heaven’s mirror, its ancient engineers may have also given in to a less scientific urge – man’s curiosity about what the future holds.

Edmunds, who has worked on the project for 12 years, said the overriding objective of the mechanism was astronomic­al and not astrologic­al.

“The texts were meant to help the viewer to understand what was the meaning of all the different points and dials, what it would teach them about the cosmos that they lived in... and about how, through cycles of time this related to their lives,” said Alexander Jones, a history professor at the Institute for the Study of the Ancient World in New York.

Researcher­s say the device was probably made on the island of Rhodes and do not think it was unique. It’s only unique in the sense that it is the only one discovered.

Slight variations in the inscriptio­ns point to at least two people being involved in that and there could have been more people making its gears.

“You get the idea that this perhaps came from a small workshop rather than one individual,” said Edmunds.

More than a dozen pieces of classical literature, stretched over a period from about 300 BC to 500 AD, make references to devices such as that found at Antikyther­a, he said.

The calculator could add, multiply, divide and subtract. It was also able to align the number of lunar months with years and display where the sun and the moon were in the zodiac.

It did contain certain imperfecti­ons, but yielded a clear snapshot of the astronomic­al knowledge at the time, said Jones.

“If you looked in the sky you would still see the body that the mechanism was showing, roughly, in the place of the mechanism, but it would not be very exact.”

But it is unclear what happened for that technology to have been lost. Its mechanical complexity would be unrivalled for at least another 1 000 years until the appearance of medieval clocks in European cathedrals. – Reuters

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