The document discusses the evolution of various early timekeeping devices from sundials and water clocks invented by ancient Greeks to the development of modern clocks like quartz clocks and atomic clocks in the 20th century.
The document discusses the evolution of various early timekeeping devices from sundials and water clocks invented by ancient Greeks to the development of modern clocks like quartz clocks and atomic clocks in the 20th century.
The document discusses the evolution of various early timekeeping devices from sundials and water clocks invented by ancient Greeks to the development of modern clocks like quartz clocks and atomic clocks in the 20th century.
The document discusses the evolution of various early timekeeping devices from sundials and water clocks invented by ancient Greeks to the development of modern clocks like quartz clocks and atomic clocks in the 20th century.
shadow clocks. The oldest known sundial is from Egypt it dates back to around 1500 B.C. Sundials have their origin in shadow clocks, which were the first devices used for measuring the parts of a day.
Sundial and Obelisk
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An early prototype of the alarm clock was invented by the Greeks. The Greeks built a water clock, called a clepsydra, where the rising waters would both keep time and eventually hit a mechanical bird that triggered an alarming whistle.
Clepsydra (Water Clock)
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The earliest mention of candle clocks comes from a Chinese poem, written in 520 A.D. According to the poem, the graduated candle, with a measured rate of burn, was a means of determining the time at night. Similar candles were used in Japan until the early 10th century.
Candle Clock
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The first hourglass, or sand clock, is said to have been invented by a French monk called Liutprand in the 8th century AD. However, concrete evidence of this revolutionary new form of clock, which measures time by the descent of sand from one glass bulb to another, first appeared in European ship inventories from the 14th century.
Hourglass
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The earliest medieval European clockmakers were Christian monks. The first recorded clock was built by the future Pope Sylvester II around the year 996. Much more sophisticated clocks and church clock towers were built by later monks. Peter Lightfoot, a 14th-century monk of Glastonbury, built one of the oldest clocks still in existence and continues to be in Monastery Clock and Clock use at London's Science Museum. Tower
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In 1504, the first portable timepiece was invented in Nuremberg, Germany by Peter Henlein. It was not very accurate. The first reported person to actually wear a watch on the wrist was the French mathematician and philosopher, Blaise Pascal (1623-1662). With a piece of string, he attached his pocket watch to his wrist. Wrist Watch
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In 1577, Jost Burgi invented the minute hand. Burgi's invention was part of a clock made for Tycho Brahe, an astronomer who needed an accurate clock for stargazing.
Minute Hand
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The pendulum clock was invented by Christian Huygens, making clocks more accurate. Pendulum clocks remained the world standard for accurate timekeeping for over 270 years and were used as standards through the 1940s until the invention of the quartz clock in 1927. Pendulum Clock
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The first mechanical alarm clock was invented by American Levi Hutchins of Concord, New Hampshire, in 1787. However, the ringing bell alarm on his clock could ring only at 4 a.m. Mechanical Alarm Clock
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Sir Sandford Fleming invented standard time in 1878. Standard time is the synchronization of clocks within a geographical area to a single time standard. It developed out of a need to aid weather forecasting and train travel. In the 20th century, the geographical areas Standard Time were evenly spaced into time zones.
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The Westclox Clock Company has issued a patent for the Big Ben alarm clock in London. The outstanding feature on this clock is the bell back, which completely envelops the inner case back and is an integral part of the case. The bell back Big Ben provides a loud alarm.
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The Warren Clock Company was formed in 1912 and produced a new type of clock run by batteries, prior to that, clocks were either wound or run by weights.
Battery-Powered Clock
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Swiss inventor John Harwood developed the first self-winding watch in 1923. An English invention patented in 1924, the self-winding wristwatch by Louis Recordon, contains a swinging weight pivoted at the centre of the movement, coupled to the barrel arbor through reduction wheels and gears. A more modern self-winding watch is fitted with a weight or rotor swinging 360 degrees and winding in both Self-Winding Watch directions.
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Canadian-born Warren Marrison, a telecommunications engineer, was searching for reliable frequency standards at Bell Telephone Laboratories. He developed the first quartz clock, a highly accurate clock based on the regular vibrations of a quartz crystal in an electrical circuit. Quartz Clock
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The atomic clock was invented and announced by Harold Lyons, the Microwave Standards Section Chief at NBS, (National Bureau of Standards) and his team in 1949. The atomic clock is the most accurate method of keeping time available, using an electronic transition frequency in the electromagnetic spectrum of an atom. Atomic Clock
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A digital clock is a type of clock that displays the time digitally (i.e. in numerals or other symbols), as opposed to an analogue clock. • Smart Clock with the Google Assistant does more than just tell you the time and wake you up.
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