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You look at your PDA (Personal Digital
Assistant) marveling at the versatility of the device, not knowing that
our ancestors, without the digital technology to help, had mastered the
art of time keeping by inventing Sundials,.
Sundials, which are the earliest known
and
ancient device for timekeeping were invented during the second
millennium BC. China, Egypt and the Middle East produced fixed and
mobile sundials during that period. To measure the time, these sundials
used the height of the sun in the sky and the length of the shadow it
produced.
Using horizontal or vertical shadow
casters
and the hollow of the bowl marked with hour lines were some of the
important features of the various designs of sundials developed by
Romans and Greeks. Using the altitude of the sun as a guideline to
measure the time, the Romans also designed a portable ring and pillar
dials.
In the first century AD, it was
discovered
that shadow casters set parallel to the axis of the Earth caused a
shadow to fall in the same time and in the same direction during all
the 365 days to make it more reliable.
In 1556, Johann Gebhart of Nuremberg
designed an ivory diptych dial. During the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, Nuremberg was famous for the collection of ivory sundials.
If the direction of South could not be
found
immediately then it is not possible to use a mobile direction sundial.
The invention of the magnetic compass greatly helped the sundials
achieve correct orientation. During Renaissance and Mediaeval periods,
sundials of elaborate designs were produced. These sundials were
intended for accurate calculation of the time. Still, most of these
sundials were used as a decorative item by wealthy merchants.
Horizontal dials, vertical dials,
equatorial
dials, polar dials analemmatic dials, reflected ceiling dials and
portable dials are some of the different types of sundials made for the
calculation of time. The Horizontal Sundials are mounted on pedestals
and located in gardens. The vertical sundials are mostly fixed on the
walls of buildings and churches. Portable dials have several variations
such as the tablet dial, ring dial, shepherd’s dials and many
others.
One of the famous sundials in the UK
is
located at the Science Centre, Green’s Windmill, Nottingham
which
was the former home of George Green, noted physicist and mathematician.
The interactive sundial is admired by school students visiting the
museum.
Today sundials are used mainly as garden
decor.
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