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  • We check the time every day, all day long.

  • But did you ever wonder - where did telling time come from?

  • Why does it matter what time it is?

  • Who determined the clock

  • and why in the world are there so many different time zones?

  • The first form of telling time was the sundial

  • and the earliest sundials known from the archaeological record

  • are obelisks from nearly 5,000 years ago.

  • Sundials indicate the time by casting a shadow

  • onto a surface.

  • The object that casts the shadow is a stick in the center known as a gnomon.

  • A well-constructed sundial can measure time with remarkable accuracy,

  • and sundials were used to monitor the performance of clocks until the modern era.

  • But sundials have their limitations too.

  • Obviously they require the sun to shine,

  • so they don't work at all during the night when it's dark.

  • Many different devices have been used over the years to estimate the passage of time:

  • candles and sticks of incense that burn down at fairly predictable speeds

  • have been used, along with the hourglass.

  • Hourglasses are devices in which fine sand

  • pours through a tiny hole at a constant rate

  • and indicates a predetermined passage of an arbitrary period of time.

  • The origin of the hourglass is uncertain,

  • although beginning in the 14th century, the hourglass was used commonly,

  • especially on board ships.

  • The motion of the boat on the water did not affect the hourglass,

  • unlike other time-measuring devices.

  • The mechanical clock was invented in the 13th century

  • which sparked a big change in traditional timekeeping methods.

  • This modern clock relied on the swing of a pendulum

  • or the vibration of a quartz crystal, which was far more accurate than sand

  • or candles.

  • Today, the basis for scientific time

  • is a continuous count of seconds

  • based on atomic clocks all around the world, known as the international atomic time.

  • Why does it matter that we keep track of time?

  • Well, time regulates our daily lives

  • and makes it possible to accurately communicate with people

  • all over the world.

  • Without a time system, we would have many challenges in farming,

  • social structures, communication, and business.

  • Take the American railroad system, for example.

  • In the mid-19th century, each railroad used its own standard time

  • generally based on the local time of its headquarters,

  • and the railroad's train schedules were published using its own time.

  • Some major railroad junctions

  • served by several different railroads

  • had a separate clock for each railroad, each showing a different time.

  • The distance between New York and Boston is about 2 degrees, or 8 minutes,

  • which can be the difference between making or missing your train connection.

  • If the difference between New York and Boston

  • is 8 minutes, imagine the difference

  • between Boston and Australia.

  • The use of time zones irons out these differences

  • and makes communication significantly smoother.

  • A time zone is a region on earth

  • that has a uniform standard time.

  • There are 40 time zones on land

  • because the earliest and latest time zones

  • are 26 hours apart.

  • Any given calendar date exists at some point

  • on the globe for 50 hours.

  • So the next time someone asks you

  • "What time is it?"

  • Your answer may be a whole lot more complicated than it used to be.

We check the time every day, all day long.

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TED-ED】時間を守る歴史-カレン・メンシング (【TED-Ed】The History of Keeping Time - Karen Mensing)

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    阿多賓 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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