Stephen Hawking reveals steampunk clock

A £1m mechanical clock featuring a massive time-eating grasshopper made its debut at the University of Cambridge on Friday, and famed cosmologist Stephen Hawking was on hand to introduce the strange and provocative timepiece.

The Corpus Clock has no hands or digital numerals, but instead features slits cut into its gold-plated face. As the escape wheel moves, darting blue LED lights behind the openings pause at the correct hour, minute, and second.

Atop the clock, the blinking, tail-wagging grasshopper (or 'chronophage', meaning 'time-eater') perpetually advances the perimeter of the 1.2m-wide round dial, devouring minutes in its snapping jaws to remind viewers that time is fleeting.

But even those with excessive amounts of cash and an affinity for giant insects won't be able to buy a Corpus Clock for their living room anytime soon. It was designed specially for the exterior of Corpus Christi college's new library as both a radical new way of telling time and a hard-to-miss piece of public art with an existential message.

On the hour, the college explains, the clock "reminds us of our mortality with the sound of a chain dropping into a wooden coffin. More playfully, the clock plays tricks on the observer, seeming occasionally to pause, run unevenly, and even go backwards."

The Corpus Clock runs on an electric motor, which reportedly will last for the next quarter century.

Seven years in the making -- with part of it engineered underwater at a secret Dutch military research institute -- the clock was created by inventor and horologist John Taylor, a student at Corpus Christi College in the 50s. He designed the timepiece as a tribute to celebrated 18th century English clockmaker John Harrison, inventor of the 'grasshopper escapement' mechanism, an internal gear device. Watch a video of Taylor and his creation here. -Leslie Katz

Post your comment

Make your comment count. Log in or register to skip the 'Are you human?' question and get an avatar

Will not be displayed with your comment

Copy the letters and numbers to prove that you're human. You won't have to do this if you log in or register

Your comment must comply with the Terms of Use

About CBS Interactive

Copyright © 2012 CBS Interactive Limited. All rights reserved.