FIG Working Week in Athens, May 22-27, 2004Ancient Greek Technology - Measuring InstrumentsDuring the FIG Working Week and the 27th General Assembly, which will be held in Athens, (in collaboration with the Association for Ancient Greek Technology Studies), a short exhibition will be organized, showing some indicative technical achievements of the Ancient Greece, together with models of several measuring devices used in topography and astronomy.
Heron’s DioptraThe "dioptra" devised by Heron is a portable surveying instrument for making accurate geodetic measurements. It measures azimuths, heights, lengths and angular distances. The apparatus, which was mounted on a tripod about 50 cm tall, pivoted on a circular plate and was moved around horizontally by a worm screw , driven by a small handle. The top plate was mounted on a toothed semicircular plate and was adjusted in the vertical plane by another worm drive. Angles could be read off the top disc, which was scored with two lines crossing at right angles. The sighting and reading elements were made of bronze. Heron’s OdometerThe device consists of a set of toothed wheels which, meshed with worm gears, transmit the movement of a chariot wheel and convert it into units of length. The three discs on top of the odometer record the distance covered in units of length. While the chariot is a scale model, the odometer can be considered as full size, since it can be fitted to a larger vehicle. This construction was based on the description given by Heron (1st century BC). The device is autonomous and can be adapted to any wheeled vehicle. Astrolabe of PtolemyClaudius Ptolemaios, mathematician, astronomer and geographer, lived in Alexandria (2nd c. A.D.). His astrolabe is an astronomical instrument on which the celestial sphere is projected stereographically. It is used for the measurement of the geographical longitude and latitude of stars from any point of the earth. It is also used to measure the distance of the moon from the sun, as well as for the measurement of the coordinates of the moon during the day. VideoMoreover, an animation of 15 min will be shown, describing a historical technical achievement of a later Greek Engineer (Charburis, 1770): the transportation of a rock weighing 2000 tones, along a distance of 20 km, to St. Petersbourg. T. P. Tassios |