• zeusdclxvi 2 hours ago
    • Razengan an hour ago

      The animation is pretty good and helps to easily understand the subject

    • Animats an hour ago

      By the same author: "Altered States from the Inside Out: A Physicist’s Embodied Journey Through Seizures, Psychedelics, and Consciousness"[1]

      [1] https://medium.com/@breid.at/seizures-crystals-psychedelics-...

      • felipeyanez 19 minutes ago

        Cool, Chile launched its national quantum strategy in December betting on high-purity copper as a strategic input for quantum manufacturing, so this kind of discovery can be included. https://anid.cl/en-que-consiste-la-estrategia-nacional-de-te...

        • Havoc 13 minutes ago

          Quantum crystals sound more like something out of a video game than reality

          • rbanffy 2 hours ago

            One interesting techno-signature a civilization that happened hundreds of millions of years ago would be odd mineral deposits.

            It's never the Silurians, but it's fun to pretend we found something interesting.

            • baxtr an hour ago

              It’s gotta be coins though.

              Most famous example was Louis XIV who created medals specifically to preserve French history for future archaeologists.

              At that time they realized that they knew almost everything about Romans and Greek through preserved medals.

              So the King created a vast medal series (Histoire Métallique) intended to outlast paper, books, and buildings.

              These bronze and gold medals were intentionally buried in the foundations of monuments like the Louvre, specifically waiting for future generations to excavate them.

              So the key is: durable materials, widely spread.

              • nntwozz an hour ago

                If humanity suddenly died tomorrow the world would be littered with handy rectangular glass pieces all over the world.

                Alien archeologists would have a field day figuring out what they were for.

                • tdeck an hour ago

                  They're clearly a ceremonial artifact, and their reflective surface is used to perform some religious ritual or other, probably related to the sun.

                  • hnthrow0287345 2 minutes ago

                    "They clearly stare into the black void to make themselves feel better!"

                    • jareklupinski 42 minutes ago

                      21st century humans had notoriously poor light receptors, so they used these "smart" devices to reflect more sun into their eyes in order to see while hunched over

                    • Tade0 an hour ago

                      Shame that dopant drift would render the chips inoperable eventually.

                      But if the Antikythera Mechanism is anything to go by, I think they would at least figure out it was an electronic communication device.

                  • jareklupinski 39 minutes ago

                    it's more likely that they used our planet as a "greenhouse" to grow these crystals for themselves, and we're just the lichen that happens to grow on the walls as a consequence of their process

                    • mgaunard 2 hours ago

                      I was literally thinking ancient civilizations/aliens throughout the whole article.

                      • darkwater an hour ago

                        Or, it's just another spin of the anthropomorphism bias we have. If anyone found those mineral what, 50 years ago? or let's say 150 to predate every quantum theory possibility... well, they would have been just nice and weird crystals with 0 importance, just because we didn't know about their properties.

                        But now they have suddenly a meaning so hey, maybe it's somebody like us, smart as us, that created them many eons ago to harness quantum capabilities back in the day.

                        • jameshart an hour ago

                          They were in fact discovered 54 years ago. The quantum properties weren’t recognized until 2012.

                        • Razengan an hour ago

                          Oil

                          or rather Petroleum

                          I mean, can an ant tell that a highway or skyscraper is artificial?

                          • vintagedave 2 hours ago

                            It is. I wish the conspiracy theorist 'the pyramids could not have been built by humans' etc etc crowds didn't exist, because I wish there was space to theorise about pre-human, pre-ape intelligent culture just for fun.

                            Same with UFOs. It seems to have changed in the past few years, but for a long time interest in them was associated with wackiness, and it was not something you could really discuss with a genuine sense of interest without the stain of appearing to believe something you didn't. It's intellectually and socially important to be able to be able to be curious and speculate without the appearance of belief in something.

                            • ChrisMarshallNY an hour ago

                              That ol' Silurian Hypothesis is fun, but, knowing how damn smart birds are, it's not inconceivable that the theropods could have become advanced enough to be at least tool-users.

                              Of course, now, we know they probably had as much similarity to lizards as we do.

                              Another interesting thought experiment is an octopus civilization. They are probably smart enough to have also developed along those lines.

                              Depending on what that civilization would have looked like, there might not be much left.

                              I remember reading an essay (probably linked from here), that it might only take a couple of million years, to completely wipe all traces of even an advanced, mechanized civilization. They posited that the only evidence of our civilization, in a few million years, would be marbles.

                              • Etheryte an hour ago

                                Was the sense of wackiness wrong though? Nearly all UFO claims went away once high quality cameras in smartphones became ubiquitous. It's useful to play around with ideas, yes, but it's also important to acknowledge that some ideas simply are wishful thinking.

                                • krapp an hour ago

                                  >Nearly all UFO claims went away once high quality cameras in smartphones became ubiquitous.

                                  If only, but no. Thanks to equally ubiquitous video and image editing and now AI and the profit potential of social media there are more such claims than anyone can count.

                                  The sitting president of the US is even intentionally stirring the pot releasing obvious AI photos of himself walking with aliens while the government is releasing "evidence" that isn't any more credible than the stuff you find on Reddit and Youtube. A significant number of Americans already believe the government has confirmed the existence of aliens and UFOs on Earth thanks to "whistleblowers" like Grusch and the Tic-Tac stuff, even though the government's official position has never changed, and most of that "evidence" has been debunked, and Grusch et.al have yet to provide anything conclusive.

                                  Far from going away, the whole thing has become normalized and I feel like we're going to reach the point where more people believe in interdimensional space elves than believe humans ever landed on the moon by the end of the decade.

                            • koolala 2 hours ago

                              "In theory, samples with no-interlayer impurities should look something like this in direct measurements"

                              Can we tell their purity from looking at the photos?

                              • contingencies 2 hours ago
                                • totetsu 2 hours ago

                                  Was there a DeLorean hidden in the mine nearby?