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822 results for "ancient Greek technology" — page 4 of 42
J_2_21 — The Baghdad Battery: Electrochemistry in Ancient Mesopotamia?
The "Baghdad Battery" — more precisely the Khujut Rabu artifacts — refers to a set of small ceramic jars containing copper cylinders and iron rods, discovered in 1936 during excavations at Khujut Rabu (also spelled Khuju
J_5_07 — Ancient Cryptography and Steganography
The concealment of information — through cryptography (transforming a message so it cannot be read without the key) and steganography (hiding the very existence of a message) — has ancient origins driven by military, dip
J_5_09 — Ancient Cartography and Mapmaking
The representation of geographical space in graphic form — cartography — is attested from deep antiquity and represents a fundamental intellectual achievement: the abstraction of three-dimensional lived space into two-di
J_5_12 — Water Clocks: Clepsydrae and Ancient Timekeeping
The water clock — known by the Greek term clepsydra ("water thief") — was one of the most important timekeeping technologies of the ancient world, supplementing sundials by providing time measurement during the night, on
J_5_15 — Sub-Saharan African Technology
Sub-Saharan Africa developed sophisticated technological traditions that have been systematically undervalued in global technology histories. The Haya people of northwestern Tanzania produced medium-carbon steel in prehe
J_5_11 — Chinese Ancient Inventions: The Technological Cornucopia
Ancient and medieval China produced an extraordinary range of technological innovations — many predating their European counterparts by centuries to millennia. The classic formulation identifies the "Four Great Invention
J_4_01 — Trepanation and Ancient Neurosurgery
This document examines Trepanation and Ancient Neurosurgery, a topic within the Ancient Technology research area. Key areas of investigation include Definition and Terminology, Antiquity and Scope, The Peruvian Concentra
J_4_08 — Ancient Refrigeration and Ice Storage — Yakhchāl to Ice Houses
The ability to preserve cold — to store ice, cool water, and refrigerate food — was achieved by ancient civilizations through ingenious engineering solutions that exploited evaporative cooling, radiative cooling, thermal
J_4_02 — Ancient Medicine and Healing Traditions
Ancient healing traditions represent some of humanity's most sophisticated technological achievements, yet are frequently underestimated by modern observers who conflate ritual context with practical ineffectiveness. Egy
J_4_18 — Ancient Hydraulic Engineering: Aqueducts, Qanat & Water Management
Ancient hydraulic engineering represents some of humanity's most sophisticated and enduring technological achievements. From the qanat systems of Persia (first millennium BCE) — underground galleries that transported gro
G_4_20 — Thermodynamics and Ancient Energy Systems
Thermodynamics — the physics of heat, energy, work, and entropy — provides a powerful framework for understanding the energy systems underlying ancient civilizations: how societies captured, converted, stored, and utiliz
D_5_13 — Obsidian: Volcanic Glass in Technology, Trade, and Ritual
Obsidian — a naturally occurring volcanic glass formed when felsic lava cools rapidly with insufficient crystal growth — is one of the most important materials in human technological and cultural history. Prized for its
V_1_10 — Ancient Greek Mathematics
Ancient Greek mathematics (c. 600 BCE – 500 CE) transformed mathematics from a collection of empirical recipes into a deductive science built on axioms, definitions, and rigorous proof. Thales of Miletus (c. 624–546 BCE)
M_5_13 — Construction Replication Experiments: Testing Ancient Building Claims
Construction replication experiments — systematic attempts to reproduce ancient architectural and engineering achievements using period-appropriate tools and techniques — constitute a critical methodological approach wit
M_5_07 — Impossible Ancient Maps of Antarctica: Critical Assessment
Among the most provocative claims in alternative history is the assertion that several medieval and Renaissance-era maps depict Antarctica — a continent not officially discovered until 1820 and not mapped until the 20th
M_3_10 — Ancient Astronomical Precision: Were They Really That Accurate?
Claims of extraordinary astronomical precision in ancient monuments — temples aligned to specific stars, pyramids oriented to true north within fractions of a degree, megalithic sites encoding the 25,920-year precession
M_3_16 — Geopolymer & Ancient Concrete Hypothesis
The geopolymer hypothesis proposes that some ancient stone structures — particularly the Egyptian pyramids — were constructed not by cutting, transporting, and stacking quarried blocks, but by casting artificial stone in
M_2_01 — Anomalous Megaliths: Nan Madol, Baalbek, and Unexplained Engineering
Several ancient megalithic sites worldwide exhibit engineering achievements that remain difficult to fully explain with our current understanding of the tools, techniques, and organizational capacity available to their b
A_4_04 — The Kojiki: Japan's Record of Ancient Matters
The Kojiki ("Record of Ancient Matters"), completed in 712 CE, is the oldest surviving literary work in Japan and the primary source for Shinto mythology and the divine origin of the Japanese imperial line. Compiled by Ō
A_3_05 — Ancient Egyptian Medical and Scientific Papyri
Ancient Egyptian medical and scientific papyri constitute the earliest known systematic attempts at empirical investigation of the human body, disease, and the natural world. The Edwin Smith Papyrus (~1600 BCE, copied fr
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