The Antikythera Shipwreck: the Ship , the Treasures, the Mechanism

From April 5, 2012 to January 12, 2014, the exhibition "The Antikythera Shipwreck: the Ship , the Treasures, the Mechanism" will run at the National Archaeological Museum in Athens, Greece.

Project Overview

Front Gears & Dials

More than a hundred years ago an extraordinary mechanism was found by sponge divers at the bottom of the sea near the island of Antikythera. It astonished the whole international community of experts on the ancient world. Was it an astrolabe? Was it an orrery or an astronomical clock? Or something else?

Computed Tomography (CT)

As stated in the data page, extensive data from Computed Tomography (CT) can not be released online, since the data sets are much too large and are not exploitable "as is". But animations from CT reconstructions can be browsed as standard movies:

These movies were created in 2006 and 2008 with the VGStudio MAX software. Click on the links below for more videos and better resolution.

Second paper on the Antikythera Mechanism published in science journal Nature

Olympiad_Dial.jpg

A new paper from the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project (AMRP) is published in the prestige science journal Nature on July 31st 2008. It reveals surprising results on the back dials of the Antikythera Mechanism - including a dial dedicated to the four-year Olympiad Cycle of athletic games in ancient Greece.

Digital Radiographs

The digital radiographs of all the known remaining fragments of the Antikythera Mechanism that were acquired by X-Tek Systems using their BladeRunner System are available for viewing and download on the website of Shaw Inspection Systems (formerly X-Tek Industrial).

The digital radiographs available include all the Main Fragments (fragments A to G) and the all the Small Fragments (fragments 1 to 75) and were obtained using X-Tek's BladeRunner CT system.

Full resolution PTM

The surfaces of the 82 remaining fragments of the Antikythera Mechanism, imaged by the HP Labs team, are available for download at the HP Labs download page. 82 PTMs are listed, this number being a coincidence, since some small fragments are grouped into a single PTM, and the larger fragments are imaged on more than one PTM per fragment.

You will have to download the PTM viewer (available on the same page) to browse the data on your computer.

Solid Models of the Antikythera Mechanism

The first model of the Antikythera Mechanism was actually build in the 1930s by Ioannis Theofanides. A model based on Derek Price's work was built in the 1980s by Robert Deroski and donated by Price to the National Archaeological Museum in Athens. In Australia, clockmaker Frank Percival made a model based on the research done by Allan Bromley and Michael Wright, who subsequently developed his own model.

With the new results and the latest gearing diagram from the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, new models are being built by other researchers, with some being working models. The results of the AMRP have been integrated into at least three models, made by Michael Wright, Dionysios Kriaris, Massimo Vicentini and Tatjana van Vark, while the Research Group is developing a model based on the ongoing research. At the same time, models are being made for educational purposes by various institutions and individuals around the world. Furthermore, some unique mechanisms are being created, based on the Antikythera Mechanism, like the watch designed by Mathias Buttet for Hublot.

List of models of the Antikythera Mechanism and of mechanisms inspired by it:

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