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Chang Heng's Dragon Jar

Chang Heng invented the first seismoscope

Around 132 AD, Chinese scientist Chang Heng invented the first seismoscope, an instrument that could register the occurrence of an earthquake.
Chang Heng's Dragon Jar

Chang Heng's Dragon Jar

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The Chinese philosopher Chang Hêng [Chang Hêng is also referred to as Choko and Tyoko, modifications of the Japanese form of his name.] invented the earliest known seismoscope in 132 A.D. The instrument was said to resemble a wine jar of diameter six feet. On the outside of the vessel there were eight dragon heads, facing the eight principal directions of the compass. Below each of the dragon heads was a toad, with its mouth opened toward the dragon. The mouth of each dragon held a ball. At the occurrence of an earthquake, one of the eight dragon-mouths would release a ball into the open mouth of the toad situated below. The direction of the shaking determined which of the dragons released its ball. The instrument is reported to have detected a four-hundred-mile distant earthquake which was not felt at the location of the seismoscope.

The inside of the Chinese seismoscope is unknown. In his translation of the original Chinese description of Chang Hêng's seismoscope. English seismologist, John Milne implied that the pendulum was a suspended mass, a common pendulum. Seismologist, Imamura thought an inverted pendulum was more probable. Hagiwara constructed an inverted-pendulum seismoscope which behaved nearly as Chang Hêng's was reported to have behaved. The model designed by Hagiwara, however, responded most frequently to transverse motion, and indicated a direction normal to the azimuth between observer and epicenter, whereas the Chinese seismoscope was reported to have indicated the azimuth of the earthquake. It has been suggested that Chang Hêng's "earthquake weathercock" was calibrated empirically for its direction-determining properties.

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