Watch British Pathé’s 1968 Robots Predict the Future From a London Engineering Lab

The future arrived in 1968, and it had metal legs. This British Pathé newsreel takes us inside the engineering faculty at Queen Mary’s College in Mile End, London, where Professor M W Thring and his team show off a remarkable collection of early robots. Brian Shayer operates a model centipede walking machine, while Thring demonstrates a walking machine with metal legs, part of his research into powered limbs for people with limb differences, and it strides right across a table. Charles Ford runs a “Mole Miner” built to dig for minerals in places too dangerous for humans, a device imagined for a moon expedition, and then climbs into a step-climbing carriage whose wheel-mounted hooks haul it up a small stairway, designed to help Thalidomide survivors. A full-sized centipede machine even carries a man along, pitched for crossing swampy or lunar ground. The clip is a wonderful time capsule, equal parts hopeful science and retro-futurist imagination.