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posted by Fnord666 on Thursday January 19 2017, @11:17AM   Printer-friendly
from the back-to-clay-tablets-are-we? dept.

Martin Kunze wants to gather a snapshot of all of human knowledge onto plates and bury it away in the world's oldest salt mine.

In Hallstatt, Austria, a picturesque village nestled into a lake-peppered region called Salzkammergut, Kunze has spent the past four years engraving images and text onto hand-sized clay squares. A ceramicist by trade, he believes the durability of the materials he plies gives them an as-yet unmatched ability to store information. Ceramic is impervious to water, chemicals, and radiation; it's emboldened by fire. Tablets of Sumerian cuneiform are still around today that date from earlier than 3000 B.C.E.

"The only thing that can threaten this kind of data carrier is a hammer," Kunze says.

[...] The goal of the project, which he calls the Memory of Mankind, is to build up a complete, unbiased picture of modern societies. The sheets will be stored along with the larger tablets in a vault 2 km inside Hallstatt's still-active salt mine. If all goes according to plan, the vault will naturally seal over the next few decades, ready for a curious future generation to open whenever it's deemed necessary.

To Kunze, this peculiar ambition is more than a courtesy to future generations. He believes the age of digital information has lulled people into a false sense that memories are forever preserved. If today's digital archives disappear—or, in Kunze's view, when they do—he wants to make sure there's a real, physical record to mark our era's place in history.


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  • (Score: 2) by rts008 on Thursday January 19 2017, @10:25PM

    by rts008 (3001) on Thursday January 19 2017, @10:25PM (#456264)

    Why, Universal Galactic, you silly rabbit. ;-)

    Does it really matter?

    Historians/linguists/archeologists seem to have a pretty good track record for figuring old/dead/obscure languages. I think the future ones will also do fine.

    Even if we get tossed back to the Stone Age, we will sooner or later advance again. If not, this whole subject will not matter at all to our descendents.(what you don't know about is seemingly irrelevant to you, until/unless it bites you in the ass)

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 19 2017, @11:58PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday January 19 2017, @11:58PM (#456302)

    Historians/linguists/archeologists seem to have a pretty good track record for figuring old/dead/obscure languages.

    Except for Linear A (or was it Linear B?).