JF Ptak Science Books Quick Post
Long-distance audio communication pre-telephone looked a little like this, brought to the world by Thomas Edison. What we've looking at here is a fellow positioned between a megaphone and listening devices--used in concert, they may have been able to communicate with a similarly-encumbered person a mile or two away (absent hills and dales and trees and buildings and so on...). All of this technology is very old: for example, the famous "Horn of Alexander" going all the way back to, well, Alexander the Great, who was said to be able to communicate by voice with troops ten miles distant. Athanasius Kircher also wrote about Old Tech in this department in his Ars Magna (1646) and Phonurga Nova (1674). It is interesting that Edison was tinkering around with this in the year following Bell's telephone.
There were at least several different versions of this scene, usually featuring one or two or four other people--this one comes from Nature of 24 October 1878 (the first version seeming to be in Scientific American of 24 August 1878),.
Also: 'Horn of Alexander the Great'. "Illustration from Filippo Bonanni's Gabinetto Armonico published in 1723, Illustration 37. Engraving by Arnold van Westerhout." Source:https://web.stanford.edu/group/kircher/cgi-bin/site/?attachment_id=679
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