First you label the hours onto the sand. Then you pick up a stick and placed it under the sun. After,you wait until shadow cast onto the hour measuring. Now you have your time.
by sitting on it
Sundial
No. The first "Clock" would make a shadow from the sun to show what time it was.
some one running from the cops
During the daytime a sundial creates a shadow that reflects the movement of the sun. So, at noon the shadow is straight up and down, and so on.
The `Gnomon` is the part of the shadow clock, or sun dial, that casts a shadow onto the face from the sun, so that the time can be read.
A shadow clock, or sundial, tells the time of day using the position of the Sun. The sun casts a shadow from the sundial's style onto a marked surface of hours.
1500 b.c
The common name for the timekeeping device sometimes known as a shadow clock is a sundial.
by sitting on it
Sundial
No. The first "Clock" would make a shadow from the sun to show what time it was.
You can tell time without a clock or watch because looking at the sun position. From the West to north to East.
some one running from the cops
It is believed that the shadow clock was originally made around 1500 B.C. It was the first predecessor of the clock that measured hours, although they were different numbers than those on modern clocks.
It is unknown who created the clock. The first clocks were known as sundials. They were used by using the sun to cast a shadow on the ground.
the shadow clock was used in 1400.