Ancient Chinese seismograph

That's the classic "ancient Chinese seismograph" featured in so many introductory geology textbooks as the lead-in to their chapters on earthquakes and seismology. Pretty cool to see it in the flesh brass.
The way it works is that each of the little dragon heads projecting off the urn had a little brass ball in its mouth. If it got shaken by an earthquake, that little brass ball would pop out and into the waiting mouth of the little brass frog down below. The frogs aligned with the wave propogation direction would be the ones to be "fed." This implication of the temblor's source direction would allow authorities to direct scouts and relief operations to the appropriate corner of the dynasty.
Neat!
Labels: alaska, earthquakes, gear, glaciation, nova, rept, teaching


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