- SAN DIEGO (Reuters) - A Roman
statue of Atlas -- the mythical titan who carried the heavens on his shoulders
-- holds clues to the long-lost work of the ancient astronomer Hipparchus,
an astronomical historian said on Tuesday.
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- The statue in question is known as the Farnese Atlas,
a 7-foot tall marble work which resides in the Farnese Collection in the
National Archeological Museum in Naples, Italy.
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- What makes it important to scientists is not the titan's
muscular form but the globe he supports: carved constellations adorn its
surface in exactly the locations Hipparchus would have seen in his day,
suggesting that the sculptor based the globe on the ancient astronomer's
star catalog, which no modern eyes have seen.
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- "There are really very few instances where lost
ancient secrets or wisdom are ever actually found," said Bradley Schaefer
of Louisiana State University. "Here is a real case where rather well-known
lost ancient wisdom has been discovered."
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- Hipparchus, who flourished around 140-125 BC, is believed
to have been one of the world's first path-breaking astronomers. Among
other innovations, he put together the first comprehensive list of the
hundreds of stars he observed, known as a star catalog.
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- This catalog no longer exists, and previously the only
evidence for it came from references made to it by astronomers who followed
Hipparchus, Schaefer said.
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- Another Hipparchus invention -- the idea of precession,
which is the slow movement of the stars and constellations across the sky
in relation to the celestial equator -- led Schaefer to believe that Atlas's
globe referred to Hipparchus's star catalog.
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- An analysis of the positions of the constellation figures
on Atlas's globe allowed Schaefer to date the work to 125 BC, plus or minus
55 years. This would have been within the range when Hipparchus would have
been working.
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- Other theories about who wrote the star catalog include
observers who were either too early -- including a poet writing around
275 BC and an Assyrian observer around 1130 BC -- or too late. This includes
the astronomer Ptolemy, writing in 128 AD.
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- More information and images are available at http:/www.phys.lsu.edu/farnese/
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