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W.C. BRYANT H.S.					Stefanos Tsartsalis

MATH- 02						4/29/98

                                      ARCHIMEDES  (287-212 BC.)

Archimedes was the first scientist to use the power of the lever. This gifted Greek 

mathematician and inventor once said, "Give me a place to stand and rest my lever on, and 

I can move the Earth." He also discovered the compound pulley and Archimedes'screw. 

Archimedes was a brilliant mathematician who helped develop geometry. He discovered 

the relation between the surface area and volume of a sphere and those of its 

circumscribing cylinder. 

A legend says that Archimedes discovered the principle of displacement while 

stepping into a full bath. He realized that the water that ran over equaled in volume the 

part of his body that was in the water. Through more experiments, he presumed the 

principle of ability to float, which is called the Archimedes' principle. According to this 

principle a body dipped in a fluid loses as much in weight as the weight of an equal volume 

of the fluid. 

Another legend describes how Archimedes uncovered a fraud against King Hieron 

II of Syracuse using his idea of flotation. The king suspected that a solid gold crown he 

ordered was partly made of silver. Archimedes first took two equal weights of gold and 

silver and compared their weights when put in water. Next he compared the weights of the 

crown and a pure silver crown of identical dimensions when each was put in water. The 

difference between these two comparisons revealed that the crown was not solid gold. 
  





Archimedes was born in Syracuse, Sicily. He lived there most of his life. When the 

Romans attacked Syracuse, Archimedes invented weapons to defend the city. He is said to 

have suggested a method of employing mirrors to set enemy ships on fire. After a two year 

attack the Romans  finally entered the city, and Archimedes was killed in the next battle. 



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