120 years have passed since the day a group of spongers from Symi accidentally discovered an ancient shipwreck outside Antikythera.
Among the findings, what undoubtedly captures the interest of the public and the scientific community is the famous Antikythera Mechanism.
More than 2.000 years after construction of, the mechanism now considered the oldest known astronomical computer has revealed many of its secrets.
According to Professor Giannis Seiradakis, "the Antikythera Mechanism is, for technology, the Acropolis for architecture." But there are still unanswered questions that still arouse our curiosity and imagination.
In this lesson, among other things, we will explore how the Mechanism works and the technological wonders it hides, we will discuss the amazing astronomical calculations it performed, we will try to represent it through faithful copies and we will read its "user manual" together.
But mainly, we will make an imaginary journey from Ancient Greek technology of the 2nd century BC. in today's scientific studies, from the archeological excavations of the beginning of the last century to the most recent underwater excavations and from the small island of Antikythera to the celestial phenomena studied by our ancestors.