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He was first credited with the arrangement on the remix album Anemoscope released in June 1999.
This form of the anemoscope was invented by Leonardo Da Vinci.
The first music album released was Anemoscope which came bundled with the original release of Kanon in June 1999.
The limited edition came bundled with the remix album Anemoscope remixing background music tracks featured in the visual novel.
Otto von Guericke also gave the title anemoscope to a machine invented by him to foretell the change of the weather, as to fair and rain.
An anemoscope is a device invented to show the direction of the wind, or to foretell a change of wind direction or weather.
Other songs are used from the arrange albums released over the years, which include Anemoscope, Recollections, Re-feel, and Ma-Na.
The "Vatican table" is a marble Roman anemoscope (wind-vane) dating from the 2nd or 3rd Century CE, held by the Vatican Museums.
The ancient anemoscope seems, by Vitruvius's description of it, to have been intended to show which way the wind actually blew, rather than to foretell into which quarter it would change.
The room was further modified by two additions which gave it its current name: a sundial, and a delicate but sophisticated anemoscope which was fixed to the ceiling of the Meridian Hall.
The anemoscope may have led to the other name of the tower, Tower of the Winds; however, the Vatican scientists may also have been thinking of the ancient observatory at Athens called the Tower of the Winds.
When the visual novel company Key, under the publisher Visual Art's, was about to release their debut title Kanon, Key produced the arrange album Anemoscope and bundled it with the first-print release of Kanon released in June 1999.
The anemoscope, in contrast, was a complex mechanism attached to the ceiling which was used to measure the strength and direction of the wind and could also identify them to some extent; it was probably because of its mechanical complexity that the anemoscope soon stopped functioning.