Timeline of time measurement technology
Timeline of time measurement technology
- 270 BC – Ctesibius builds a popular water clock
- 46 BC – Julius Caesar and Sosigenes develop a solar calendar with leap years
- 1000s – Sets of hourglasses were maintained by ship's pages to mark the progress of a ship during its voyage
- 1000s – Large town clocks were used in Europe to display local time, maintained by hand
- 1335 – First known mechanical clock, in Milan
- 1502 – Peter Henlein builds the first pocketwatch
- 1582 – Pope Gregory XIII, Aloysius Lilius, and Christopher Clavius introduce a Gregorian calendar with an improved leap year system
- 1655 – Cassini builds the heliometer of San Petronio in Bologna, to standardise Solar noon.
- 1656 – Christian Huygens builds the first accurate pendulum clock
- 1676 – Motion works and minute hand introduced by Daniel Quare
- 1680 – Second hand introduced
- 1737 – John Harrison presents the first stable nautical chronometer, thereby allowing for precise longitude determination while at sea
- 1850 – Aaron Lufkin Dennison starts in Roxbury, Mass.U.S.A. the Waltham Watch Company and develops the American System of Watch Manufacturing.
- 1884 – International Meridian Conference adopts Greenwich Mean Time for consistency with Nevil Maskelyne's 18th century observations for the Method of Lunar Distances
- 1893 – Introduction by Webb C. Ball of the General Railroad Timepiece Standards in North America: Railroad chronometers
- 1928 – Joseph Horton and Warren Morrison build the first quartz crystal oscillator clock
- 1946 – Felix Bloch and Edward Purcell develop nuclear magnetic resonance
- 1949 – Harold Lyons develops an atomic clock based on the quantum mechanical vibrations of the ammonia molecule
- 2008 – Launch date for the Primary Atomic Reference Clock in Space.
See also: clock
Categories: Technology timelines | Timekeeping