An Adams Waywiser

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[Waywiser].

ADAMS, Geo[rge]
London,
Made by Geo. Adams at Tycho Brahe's Head in Fleetstreet,
[circa 1740].
Signed to dial 'Made by Geo. Adams at Tycho Brahe's Head in Fleetstreet, London', with engraved brass dial divided for miles, furlongs, and links of chains, six-spoke wheel with steel rim tread, square mahogany fork body, hoop handle, on modern brass and mahogany stand.
2864

To scale:

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The origins of mechanically measuring and recording distance can be traced speculatively to 336-323 BC when Alexander the Great employed bematists for his campaign into Asia. As Donald W. Engels theorises in his publication, 'Alexander the Great and the Logistics of the Macedonian Army', "The accuracy of the measurements implies that the bematists used a sophisticated mechanical device for measuring distances, undoubtedly an odometer such as described by Heron of Alexandria...

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