A closer look at the Antikythera with a 3-D X-ray scan reveals inscriptions not visible before

PARTIAL KNOWLEDGEThese 82 fragments are believed to have all been part of the Antikythera mechanism, which dates to the first century B.C.Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, Freeth et al., Nature
Chalk up another Olympian feat to a mechanical gadget
discovered more than a century ago in a 2,100-year-old shipwreck.
Scientists over the past decades have determined that the
device was used to perform complex astronomical calculations, including the
prediction of solar and lunar eclipses and the movement of the planets.
Known as the Antikythera mechanism, for the small Greek
island near which sponge divers recovered it in 1901, the device is split into
82 fragments and is an agglomeration of disintegrating bronze gears and teeth,
encrusted dials and hard-to-read inscriptions. Researchers have long been
intrigued by both the gear teeth and inscriptions.
Using 3-D X-ray imaging to reveal more of the inscriptions on
the device, researchers have now determined that the gadget charted the
four-year cycle of the Olympics and the cycles of other ancient Greek games.

INSTRUCTION MANUALA better look at inscriptions on a Greek gadget discovered more than a century ago in a 2,100-year-old shipwreck show that the device not only tracked the motion of heavenly bodies and predicted eclipses, but also functioned as a sophisticated calendar and mapped the four-year cycle of the ancient Greek Olympics. Click on the image for a full story.Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, Freeth et al., Nature
These results and other new findings “link the cycle of
human institutions with the celestial cycles embedded in the mechanism's
gear-work,” says Tony Freeth of the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project in Cardiff, Wales,
and Images First Ltd in London.
The first clue suggesting a link to the Greek games came
when researchers deciphered the word “NEMEA”
near a small subsidiary dial on the mechanism. This represents the Nemean
games, part of the Olympiad cycle. Next, Freeth and his colleagues deciphered
other names, including “ISTHMIA” for the games at Corinth,
“PYTHIA” for the games at Delphi, and “OLYMPIA”
for the Olympic games. Freeth, a filmmaker and mathematician, and his
collaborators report the findings in the July 31 Nature.
The newly revealed inscriptions also identify 12 calendar
month names on the back of the mechanism, showing a sophisticated 19-year
calendar.

PROJECTIONA schematic shows the overall, 3-D architecture of the Antikythera mechanism, according to a 2006 model.Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, Freeth et al., Nature
“The interpretation of the upper-back dial as a [calendar]
dial is not new, but the authors have for the first time been able to recover
all month names from the few heavily damaged remaining fragments of the 235
original labels,” notes François Charlotte, an independent researcher and
scientific manuscript cataloguer at the Chester Beatty Library in Dublin, Ireland.
The paper provides the first concrete evidence for the use
of a calendar scheme described by the Greek astronomer Geminos. In this system,
months have 30 days with one day omitted every 64th day in order to have the
correct average month length over a cycle of 19 years. “Historians of astronomy
had until now doubted that this scheme had been actually used in civil life. But
the evidence from the Antikythera mechanism now proves them wrong,” says Charlotte.
The team found that the names of the months correspond to
those used in Corinth and suggest that the
device may have originated in Syracuse,
Sicily, then a Corinthian colony
and the residence of Archimedes. Although the Antikythera mechanism was devised
several decades after Archimedes’ death, its geographic location suggests a
possible link to scientific instruments developed by the Greek scholar,
Freeth’s team notes.
“Establishing a calendar is very tricky,” comments Diomidis
Spinellis of the Athens University of Economics and Business. “One has to find
a way to divide time into logical units of days and months that follow
accurately the movements of the heavenly bodies,” he notes. Moreover, he
adds, “An ideal calendar should work without requiring astronomers to intervene
annually to align the calendar year with the tropical year, which determines
the seasons.”
Such a calendar was employed by the Romans, but “new details
uncovered on the operation of the Antikythera mechanism indicate that it may
have been common for Greek civil calendars to follow the highly accurate
[19-year] Metonic cycle by about 100 B.C.," says Spinellis.
The findings further bolster the notion that the Antikythera
mechanism is at least 1,000 years more advanced than any other known mechanical
devices from the first century B.C.
Found in: Archaeology, Astronomy and Science & Society