In 1885, working as an assistant at the
University of Karlsruhe, Rebeur-Paschwitz became interested in
Friedrich Zöllner’s pendulum. He collaborated with three different manufacturers: the Fecker pendulum in 1886, the Repsold pendulum in 1888, and the Stückrath two-component model in 1894. Rebeur-Paschwitz installed one of his pendulum in
Potsdam and the second one in
Wilhelmshaven close to the North Sea. The pendulums designed to measure the horizontal motion of the ground due to supposed
lunar tides. On 17 April 1889 he recorded very strong deflections of the vertical axis on both instruments at the time when a strong earthquake occurred near Tokyo in Japan. Even though the shaking of local earthquakes was recorded several times before, this was the first time when the waves of a faraway earthquake had been registered. This observation marked the change of seismology from a regional to a global science, == International seismological cooperation ==