How Does The Water Clock that Changed the World: Ctesibius’ Float-Type Clepsydra Work?

Ctesibius’ float-type clepsydra is like a water clock that tells time using floating toys and water, just like when you fill up your bath with water and watch how it slowly fills the tub.

Imagine you have a big bucket full of water. At the bottom, there’s a tiny hole. Water trickles out through this hole into another container below. Now picture a floating toy inside that lower container, maybe one that bobbs around like a duck in a pond. As more water flows in, the toy slowly rises.

Ctesibius used this idea to create a clock that tells time by measuring how much water flows out over a certain period. The float helps show when specific amounts of time have passed, just like how you might know it’s been 10 minutes if your bath is halfway full.

How the Water Clock Works

  • Water flows from one container to another.
  • A float rises as water fills up the lower container.
  • The float moves a pointer or shows numbers, like a little hand on a clock face, telling you what time it is.

This clever use of floating toys and water helped people measure time more accurately, making it easier to plan their day, just like how you know when it's snack time by watching your bathtub fill up!

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Examples

  1. A kid uses a water clock to measure how long it takes to build a sandcastle.
  2. A farmer uses a simple water clock to know when to plant seeds.
  3. A teacher shows students how time can be measured with flowing water.

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