Episode
101 - From Skywatching to Wall Clocks: How Nature Became Our Calendar
- Podcast
- Buzz Blossom & Squeak
- Published
- Feb 18, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 1206
- Processing state
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Summary
How did watching the sky turn into the calendar on the wall and the clock we check every day? This episode explores how ancient sky observations evolved into the structured systems of time we now take for granted. ⏳ Time Before Clocks Long before digital watches and printed planners, humans looked to the sky. The rising and setting of the sun, the phases of the moon, and the shifting constellations provided the first reliable markers of time. While animals still follow light, temperature, and seasonal cues, humans began translating those natural cycles into numbers and systems. 🌍 The Babylonian Breakthrough Around 4,000 years ago in ancient Mesopotamia, the Babylonians created a mathematical framework that still shapes how we measure time today. Base 60: The Language of Time Instead of counting in base 10 (like we do), the Babylonians used a base 60 system. Why 60? It divides evenly by many numbers (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 12, 15). It made calculations practical. It allowed flexible fractions. This system gave us: 60 seconds in a minute 60 minutes in an hour 360 degrees in a circle The 12-part division of day and night These weren’t cosmic requirements — they were human decisions that worked well. 🌙 Lunar Months and Drifting Seasons Early calendars were based on the moon. A lunar month lasts about 29.5 days. Twelve lunar months equal 354 days — about 11 days short of a solar year. Without correction, calendars drifted away from the seasons. The Babylonians solved this by occasionally adding an extra month (intercalation), keeping lunar months aligned with agricultural seasons. This lunar-solar balancing act is still reflected in calendars like the Hebrew calendar today. ♈ The Zodiac: Astronomy Before Astrology Originally, the zodiac was not about horoscopes or personality t…