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Updated by elden on Mar 29, 2019
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Time on My Hands - A Brief History of the Development of Clocks

Time on My Hands - A Brief History of the Development of Clocks

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Time on My Hands - A Brief History of the Development of Clocks

More than 7000 years ago, the Hindus of the Aryan Civilization used to measure time by looking at the positions of the stars, the Sun and other objects in the sky. Some claim that these were the initial individuals to measure time and that they used the first approach to measure time. Before this, people used candles and sticks of incense. They'd burn down at predictable speeds and allow people to learn an increment of time and in this way judge just how long it took to accomplish a particular job.

Actually, people did not need a have to know the period or the times as counted now. They unearthed that the seasons and the phases of the moon could be used to measure longer passages or periods of time. It had been in the Middle East and North Africa that people were so busy which they found they needed a way to handle their time more closely. They used sundials and hourglasses to measure this smaller amount of time. Then they found ways to count using minutes and hours to show smaller increments of time. This is probably 5000-6000 years ago. merilna ura

With the curiosity about electronics in the 20th century, we made major changes in clocks and clock works. The clocks got smaller with the necessity for smaller methods of creating the clocks keep time. The vibration of tuning forks and quartz crystals were used to create them run far more accurately. After all, the clock is among the oldest inventions of and certainly among the oldest electronic device created by humans. The human mind continually changes the operation of clocks, the appearance of the clock and the development of manufacturing companies that are in charge of creating or mass producing clocks of all types and sizes. Those who have invested time and money in to the manufacturing of clocks have lived the actual American Dream.