One of the earliest known references to lodestone's magnetic properties was made by 6th century BC Greek philosopher
Thales of Miletus, whom the ancient Greeks credited with discovering lodestone's attraction to iron and other lodestones. The name
magnet may come from lodestones found in
Magnesia,
Anatolia. The
ancient Indian medical text
Sushruta Samhita describes using magnetic properties of the lodestone to remove arrows embedded in a person's body. The earliest Chinese literary reference to magnetism occurs in the 4th-century BC
Book of the Devil Valley Master (
Guiguzi). In the chronicle
Lüshi Chunqiu, from the 2nd century BC, it is explicitly stated that "the lodestone makes
iron come or it attracts it." The earliest mention of a needle's attraction appears in a work composed between 20 and 100 AD, the
Lunheng (
Balanced Inquiries): "A lodestone attracts a needle." In the 2nd century BC, Chinese
geomancers were experimenting with the magnetic properties of lodestone to make a "south-pointing spoon" for divination. When it is placed on a smooth bronze plate, the spoon would invariably rotate to a north–south axis. While this has been shown to work, archaeologists have yet to discover an actual spoon made of magnetite in a Han tomb. Based on his discovery of an
Olmec artifact (a shaped and grooved magnetic bar) in North America, astronomer John Carlson suggests that lodestone may have been used by the Olmec more than a thousand years prior to the Chinese discovery. Carlson speculates that the Olmecs, for astrological or
geomantic purposes, used similar artifacts as a directional device, or to orient their temples, the dwellings of the living, or the interments of the dead. "A century of research has pushed back the first mention of the magnetic compass in Europe to
Alexander Neckam about +1190, followed soon afterwards by Guyot de Provins in +1205 and Jacques de Vitry in +1269. All other European claims have been excluded by detailed study..." Lodestones have frequently been displayed as valuable or prestigious objects. The
Ashmolean Museum in Oxford contains a lodestone adorned with a gilt coronet that was donated by
Mary Cavendish in 1756, possibly to secure her husband's appointment as Chancellor of Oxford University.
Isaac Newton's signet ring reportedly contained a lodestone which was capable of lifting more than 200 times its own weight. And in 17th century London, the
Royal Society displayed a spherical lodestone (a
terrella or 'little Earth'), which was used to illustrate the Earth's magnetic fields and the function of mariners' compasses. One contemporary writer, the satirist
Ned Ward, noted how the
terrella "made a paper of Steel Filings prick up themselves one upon the back of another, that they stood pointing like the Bristles of a
Hedge-Hog; and gave such Life and Merriment to a Parcel of Needles, that they danc'd [...] as if the devil were in them." == References ==