Freedman Center Funded ProjectsMain MenuFreedman Faculty FellowsFreedman Student FellowsOur Funder: Walter G. FreedmanCharlie Harper296dda6727d6bc9ef05d61a7213be572a58f52bdFreedman Center for Digital Scholarship
Paul Iversen, PhD, Associate Professor, Chair Department of Classics, and Director of Undergraduate Studies, used a 3-D rendering software to decipher the Greek inscriptions incised on the Antikythera Mechanism, the world’s oldest known analogue computer. The instrument was salvaged from a shipwreck dating to 70-50 BCE and dates ca. 200-50 BCE. Iversen’s use of the 3-D rendering software to examine this heavily corroded device will result in a new edition of the inscriptions that could bring new insight into the machine’s operations and provenance.