Archiv für die Kategorie „Archäologie“

PostHeaderIcon Enigmatic relic was an eclipse calculator

The mystery over the purpose of a sophisticated geared “calculator” built in the 2nd century BC has finally been solved. The so-called “Antikythera mechanism” was found in 1902 by sponge divers exploring a shipwreck off the Greek island of the same name, but its exact use had puzzled scientists. The relic consists of numerous fragments, including brass gears embedded in thick mineral encrustations. The device is thought to have once been housed in a wooden box about the size of a carriage clock and is more complex by far than any other machine known to have existed on the planet for the following 1000 years. Now a team led by Mike Edmunds at Cardiff University in Wales has shown that the Antikythera mechanism was designed to predict solar and lunar eclipses from the relative positions of the Earth, Moon and Sun. Edmunds’s team used an industrial CT scanner to map out the gear trains within the mineral-encrusted fragments. The scans allowed them to determine how the components fit together and to work out their function. The team also found fragments of previously hidden text engraved on the metal.
The 2.000-year-old computer

PostHeaderIcon Aztec Temple Found in Mexico City “Exceptional”, Experts Say

National Geographic News

PostHeaderIcon Significant Aztec ruin unearthed in Mexico City

With the unearthing of an altar and a monolith in the busy heart of Mexico City, Mexican archeologists have found what may be the most significant Aztec ruin in decades. The 15th-century altar, part of the Aztec empire’s main temple, was uncovered last weekend near the city’s main Zocalo square along with a 3.5-meter stone slab, most of which is still buried under earth. The altar has a frieze of the rain god Tlaloc and other figures related to an agricultural rite. Archeologists are still unearthing the monolith which they think might be part of an entrance to an underground chamber.
Source: Reuters


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