- Ancient Greek Science
- Offers profiles of notable Greek mathematicians, astronomers, inventors, and geographers of antiquity. - Antikythera Mechanism (9)
- Greek Astronomy: The Revival of an Ancient Science
- Looks at one of the most powerful creations of Greek science, mathematical astronomy, created by Hipparchus in the second century B.C. and given final form by Ptolemy in the second century A.D. - Greek Mathematics and its Modern Heirs
- Classical roots of the scientific revolution. - Greek Medicine
- Online exhibit exploring the foundations of modern Western medicine from mythical healers such as Asclepius to ancient writers such as Hippocrates, Aristotle, and Galen. - Greek Numbers and Arithmetic
- Briefly describes Attic and Ionian enumeration, how the ancient Greeks expressed large numbers and fractions, and basic calculation. - history for kids: Greek Science
- Looks at how the ancient Greeks used science as a way of organising the world and making order out of chaos. - History Topics: Index of Ancient Greek Mathematics
- Provides information on ancient Greek mathematicians, astronomers, philosophers, and their works. - How the Greeks Used Geometry to Understand the Stars
- Lecture of Michael Fowler. - Inventing the Solar System: Early Greek Scientists Struggle to Explain How the Heavens Move
 - Jason's Web Site on Ancient Greek Science
- With sections on agriculture, astronomy, earth science, mathematics and medicine. - Mathematics: Ancient History and Its Modern Fates
- Examines how the Scientific Revolution of the 16th and 17th centuries began with the revival of several tremendously important and formidably difficult works of Greek science. - Origins of Greek Mathematics
(PDF) - Text from one of G. Donald Allen's lectures on the history of mathematics. - Science in Ancient Greece
- Provides a brief over view of the mathematics, biology, and earth science of the age. - Tunnel of Eupalinos, The
- Articles and images about the 3,400-foot aqueduct designed by Eupalinos of Megara and built through a mountain on the island of Samos in the 6th century BCE.
|