Don't know if any of you guys are interested in this kind of thing, but if so, Scientific American has a great writeup on the Antikythera Mechanism in the Nov issue.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=decoding-an-ancient-computerIf you don't know what it is, it's a device (or rather the remains of a device) found in 1901 that none knew what the heck it did for years.
Eventually, the thing was carbon dated to the first century BC.
Basically, the authors of the article have been working to reconstruct what this thing did and finally were able to with the help of some cutting edge scanning xray equipment called the Blade Runner (no kidding) that's been newly developed.
Essentially, its an astronomical computer, made out of brass gears (hence at least part of my interest!) and enclosed (or was enclosed) in a wood box with brass dials and gauges to read the phases of the moon, sun, earth orbits, and various time cycles (like the cycles of the olympic games, etc).
No other instrument of its complexity has been discovered back that far. The earliest next example comes in around 1100ad, more than 1000 years later!
Just the description of what these guys went through to figure out this one part of the mechanism that consisted of the weird offset pin and slot driven gearing set makes you wonder at the kind of geniuses roaming around the ancient Mediterranean.
Anyway fascinating stuff. Sorry, i just realized the article is just a stub
Here's a site with a lot more info
http://www.antikythera-mechanism.gr/