
For more than a century, researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology have calibrated America's measurements, setting common baselines for everything from weights to time to the fat content of milk.
The work has involved a gadgeteer's fantasy of instruments -- time standards and refractometers, galvanometers and magne-gages, thousands of tools that make measurement possible. Yet even as NIST became the world's preeminent source of quantification, they simply lost track of what some of those old instruments did.
Now on display at NIST, those mystery tools are fascinating to see: Nothing sparks a "My name is Ozymandias" moment like a finely crafted, highly sophisticated object of forgotten provenance and purpose. But they don't need to stay lost. NIST hopes the public can identify the instruments, which have been gathered in the museum artifacts section of NIST's digital archives.
In coming months, NIST will add hundreds more mystery tools. On the following pages are a few of our favorites among those already posted. They and other artifacts can be seen in higher resolution in NIST's archive. If you know what any of them are, Cette adresse email est protégée contre les robots des spammeurs, vous devez activer Javascript pour la voir. .
Above:Dimensions (cm): 21 x 46 x 26. Possibly an ohm meter; used in electrical engineering. (Link to full NIST listing.)
Image: Courtesy of the National Institute of Standards and Technology Digital Collections, Information Services Division.
See Also: