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  2. Archimedes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedes

    Cicero Discovering the Tomb of Archimedes (1805) by Benjamin West. Archimedes was born c. 287 BC in the seaport city of Syracuse, Sicily, at that time a self-governing colony in Magna Graecia. The date of birth is based on a statement by the Byzantine Greek scholar John Tzetzes that Archimedes lived for 75 years before his death in 212 BC. [9]

  3. Archimedes (bryozoan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedes_(bryozoan)

    Archimedes is a genus of fenestrate bryozoans with a calcified skeleton of a delicate spiral-shaped mesh that was thickened near the axis into a massive corkscrew-shaped central structure. The most common remains are fragments of the mesh that are detached from the central structure, and these may not be identified other than by association ...

  4. The Sand Reckoner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sand_Reckoner

    Following Archimedes's estimate of a myriad (10,000) grains of sand in a poppy seed; 64,000 poppy seeds in a dactyl-sphere; the length of a stadium as 10,000 dactyls; and accepting 19mm as the width of a dactyl, the diameter of Archimedes's typical sand grain would be 18.3 μm, which today we would call a grain of silt. Currently, the smallest ...

  5. Siege of Syracuse (213–212 BC) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Syracuse_(213...

    Archimedes before his death with a Roman soldier – copy of a Roman mosaic from the 2nd century. Marcus Claudius Marcellus had ordered that Archimedes, the well-known mathematician – and possibly equally well-known to Marcellus as the inventor of the mechanical devices that had so dominated the siege – should not be killed. Archimedes, who ...

  6. Library of Alexandria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_of_Alexandria

    According to legend, during the librarianship of Apollonius, the mathematician and inventor Archimedes (lived c. 287 –c. 212 BC) came to visit the Library of Alexandria. [51] During his time in Egypt, Archimedes is said to have observed the rise and fall of the Nile , leading him to invent the Archimedes' screw , which can be used to ...

  7. Archimedes' heat ray - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedes'_heat_ray

    Archimedes is purported to have invented a large scale solar furnace, sometimes described as a heat ray, and used it to burn attacking Roman ships during the Siege of Syracuse (c. 213–212 BC). It does not appear in the surviving works of Archimedes and there is no contemporary evidence for it, leading to modern scholars doubting its existence.

  8. Archimedes Palimpsest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archimedes_Palimpsest

    The Archimedes Palimpsest is a parchment codex palimpsest, originally a Byzantine Greek copy of a compilation of Archimedes and other authors. It contains two works of Archimedes that were thought to have been lost (the Ostomachion and the Method of Mechanical Theorems ) and the only surviving original Greek edition of his work On Floating ...

  9. History of geodesy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_geodesy

    Archimedes (c. 287 – c. 212 BC) gave an upper bound for the circumference of the Earth. In proposition 2 of the First Book of his treatise On Floating Bodies, Archimedes demonstrates that "The surface of any fluid at rest is the surface of a sphere whose centre is the same as that of the Earth."