Yes, astronomy was seen in both Roman and Greek civilizations. In ancient Greece, philosophers like Aristotle and Hipparchus made significant contributions to astronomy, developing theories about the Earth, the Sun, and the motion of celestial bodies. The Romans also studied and adopted much of Greek astronomy, with notable figures like Ptolemy further advancing the field with his geocentric model of the universe.
Two Roman contributions to architecture are the dome and the Tuscan order of column.
ptolemy....
The Babylonians made distinct contributions to the growth of civilization. They added to the knowledge of Astronomy, advanced the knowledge of mathematics, and built the first great capital…ancient civilizationHammurabi produces the world's first written set of laws. There were 282 in total.
An amazingly accurate calendar--the modern world didn't surpass it in accuracy until the 1960s. Architecture and astronomy--
She made contributions to astronomy, philosophy, & mathematics.
Thales was not a chemist; important contributions in geometry and astronomy.
Astronomy, physics, and mathematics.
Babylonians
Maths & astronomy.
Yes, astronomy was seen in both Roman and Greek civilizations. In ancient Greece, philosophers like Aristotle and Hipparchus made significant contributions to astronomy, developing theories about the Earth, the Sun, and the motion of celestial bodies. The Romans also studied and adopted much of Greek astronomy, with notable figures like Ptolemy further advancing the field with his geocentric model of the universe.
Babylonia.
babylonians. :)
Two Roman contributions to architecture are the dome and the Tuscan order of column.
astronomy, number 0
the possiblility of traveling to other galaxys
irrigation, writing, system of numbers 1 through 60, astronomy