Friday, August 03, 2007

Leonardo Da Vinci's 10 Best Ideas

livescience.com
Leonardo Da Vinci's 10 Best Ideas

10.

IMAGE CREDIT: By Permission of the British Library Arundel 263, f.4v,11


Mirror Writing

Was it a ploy to thwart Renaissance copycats peeking at his notes, or just a way to avoid the inky mess of writing left-handed? Whatever his motives, Da Vinci sure liked mirror writing: most of his journals are scrawled in reverse.


9.

IMAGE CREDIT: By Permission of the British Library Arundel 263, f.24v


Scuba Gear

Da Vinci's fascination with the sea spurred many designs for aquatic exploration. His diving suit was made of leather, connected to a snorkel made of cane and a bell that floated at the surface. Proving the artist was also practical, the suit included a pouch the diver could urinate in.


8.

IMAGE CREDIT: Courtesy of Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci


The Revolving Bridge

Always a fan of the quick getaway, Da Vinci thought his revolving bridge would be best used in warfare. The light yet sturdy materials, affixed to a rolling rope-and-pulley system, allowed an army to pick up and go at a moment's notice.


7.

IMAGE CREDIT: Courtesy of Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci


The Winged Glider

Da Vinci's imagination was filled to capacity with ideas for flying machines, including several gliders equipped with flappable wings. This open-shelled model, fitted with seats and gears for the pilot, did not include a design for a crash helmet.


6.

IMAGE CREDIT: Courtesy of Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci


The Triple-Barreled Cannon

More thinker than fighter, Da Vinci's distaste for conflict didn't stop him from dreaming up designs for more efficient cannons like this one. His jacked-up triple-barrel would have been a deadly weapon on the battlefield, fast and light with lots of extra fire power.


5.

IMAGE CREDIT: Courtesy of Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci


The Aerial Screw

Modern scientists agree it may never have lifted off the ground, but Da Vinci's "helicopter" design is still one of his most famous. The curious contraption was meant to be operated by a four-man team and could have been inspired by a windmill toy popular in Leonardo's time.


4.

IMAGE CREDIT: Courtesy of Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci


The Ideal City

Living in a Milan wrought with plague, Da Vinci envisioned a more efficient city he'd be proud to call home. His architectural draughts are highly detailed and even include horse stables with fresh air vents.


3.

IMAGE CREDIT: Courtesy of Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnologia Leonardo da Vinci


The Self-Propelled Car

It's no Ferrari, but Da Vinci's designs for a self-propelled vehicle were revolutionary for his day. His wooden "car" moved by the interaction of springs with geared wheels. Scientists at one museum in Florence built a replica in 2004 and found it worked as Da Vinci intended.


2.

IMAGE CREDIT: stock.xchng


Geologic Time

Plate tectonics? No sweat. While most of his contemporaries explained inland, mountain-top mollusk fossils as leftovers from the Great Flood, Da Vinci thought otherwise. He supposed (right) that the mountains must once have been coastline before many years of gradually shifting upwards.


1.




The Vitruvian Man

Da Vinci modeled his perfect human form after the proportions laid out by Vitruvius, an ancient Roman architect. The angry-looking man drawn by Da Vinci has reason to smile - he's now considered one of the most recognizable figures on earth.

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