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Eiffel Tower goes dark for popeSees $1.5 Billion Tariff Hit Bank of England to delay Thursday interest rate announcement by two minutes Mysterious Antikythera Mechanism may have jammed constantly, like a modern printer.
Divers found the Antikythera mechanism in a shipwreck in 1900. Zde via Wikimedia Commons under CC BY-SA 4.0 More than a century ago, a group of sponge divers discovered a shipwreck near the Greek ...
The Antikythera mechanism, a mysterious ancient Greek device that is often called the world’s first computer, may not have functioned at all, according to a simulation of its workings.
More than a century on from being spotted and salvaged by sponge divers in the Mediterranean Sea, the Antikythera mechanism continues to excite academic research and the public imagination.
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Fragments of the Antikythera Mechanism at the National Archaeological Museum of Athens. © Zde, CC BY-SA 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0, via ...
The mysterious Antikythera Mechanism may not have been a cryptic celestial measuring device, but just a toy prone to constant jamming. And the secret to its true purpose, according to new research ...
A reproduction of a remnant of the Antikythera mechanism, the oldest example of ... there are ways to manage the condition. A Glow-in-the-Dark Cloud: Astronomers revealed the discovery of the ...
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This artifact, now known as the Antikythera Mechanism, stands as a testament to the technological prowess of ancient Greece, challenging our preconceptions about historical mechanical engineering ...
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