This is a list of lost inventions - technologies whose original capabilities cannot be recreated in the same form anymore. It does not include theoretical inventions.
Certain lost inventions
edit- Artificial petrifaction of human cadavers invented by Girolamo Segato.[1]
- Greek fire, a Byzantine incendiary weapon used to set enemy ships on fire.[1]
- Panjagan, a projectile weapon or archery technique used by the later Sasanians that could shoot a volley of five arrows.[2]
Questionable examples
editIt is unknown whether these inventions truly existed, had all of their described properties, or were truly novel.
- Archimedes' heat ray, a device that Archimedes is purported to have used to burn attacking Roman ships during the siege of Syracuse.[1]
- Claw of Archimedes, purportedly a sort of crane used to drop an attacking Roman ship partly down in to the water during the siege of Syracuse.[3]
- Polybolos, an ancient Greek repeating ballista.[4] A MythBusters episode built and tested a replica, concluding that it plausibly could have existed. However, the replica machine was prone to breakdowns.[5]
- Roman flexible glass, whose inventor was reportedly beheaded so that gold and silver would not be devalued.[6]
- Mithridate, said to have functioned as a panaceaic antidote.[1]
- Sloot Digital Coding System, reported to have been able to store a complete digital movie file in 8 kilobytes of data.[7]
- Stradivarius stringed instruments, considered some of the finest instruments ever made. Theories explaining their purported quality include denser wood unique to the time period due to solar activity, treatment with other materials like calcium and aluminum which have been found in a 2016 shaving, and technique.[1] However, blind experiments have never conclusively found a difference between the sound of Stradivari's violins and other high-quality violins.[8]
- Starlite is an intumescent material said to withstand enormous amounts of heat.[6]
- Zhang's seismoscope, also known as hòufēng dìdòngyí, an ancient Chinese seismometer. Multiple modern recreations have been created, but it is debated whether they are mechanical replicas.[9] Hong-sen Yan claims that they do not reach the seismoscope's historically reported level of accuracy and range.[10]
Misconceptions
editThese technologies can be recreated, but are sometimes claimed to be lost.
- The Blaschkas' Glass Flowers and glass sea creatures at Harvard are attributed to the extraordinary skill of the craftsmen.[11][12]
- Human lunar landing, while possible to recreate in the vein of the six Apollo Moon landings, there is not currently the needed infrastructure to construct the required spacecraft.[13]
- The Iron pillar of Delhi, notable for the rust-resistant composition of the metals used in its construction.[14]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e "The biggest inventions lost to time". Grunge. 13 January 2022.
- ^ Farrokh, Kaveh; Maksymiuk, Katarzyna; Garcia, Javier Sanchez (2018). The Siege of Amida (359 CE). Archeobooks. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978-83-7051-887-5.
- ^ Young, C. K. (December 2004). "Archimedes's iron hand or claw – a new interpretation of an old mystery". Centaurus. 46 (3): 189–207. Bibcode:2004Cent...46..189Y. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0498.2004.00009.x.
- ^ Alan Wilkins (2003). Roman Artillery. Osprey Publishing. p. 8. ISBN 978-0-7478-0575-5.
- ^ Episode 152: Arrow Machine Gun. mythresults.com, November 3, 2010.
- ^ a b Miley, Jessica (22 August 2018). "9 Potentially World-Changing Inventions That Never Came to Be". Interesting Engineering.
- ^ "The Sloot Digital Coding System is not about compression". September 17, 2006.
- ^ Beamen, John (2000). The Violin Explained: Components, Mechanism, and Sound. Oxford University Press. pp. 89–90. ISBN 978-0-19-816739-6. Retrieved 2009-01-23.
- ^ Miller, Roman; Perrin, Pat; Coleman, Wim (2015). 10 Lost Inventions that Might Have Changed the World as we Know it. pp. 20–23.
- ^ Yan, Hong-sen (2007). Reconstruction Designs of Lost Ancient Chinese Machinery. History of Mechanism and Machine Science. Vol. 3. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-6460-9. ISBN 978-1-4020-6459-3.
- ^ "Sea Creatures in Glass". Harvard Museum of Natural History.
- ^ "Glass Flowers: The Ware Collection of Blaschka Glass Models of Plants". Harvard Museum of Natural History.
- ^ "How We Lost The Ability To Travel To The Moon".
- ^ On the Corrosion Resistance of the Delhi Iron Pillar, R. Balasubramaniam, Corrosion Science, Volume 42 (2000) pp. 2103–2129.