a condensation cycle will occur, and drip percolate the soft tissue and adipocere into a slurry [coffin liquor] that will settle to the bottom of the sarcophagus.
It feels like a kind of end of civilization or even humanity type of thing, where at some point all of the earth will have been excavated and all human evidence will have been removed and catalogued and archived in some warehouse, totally sanitizing sterilizing the planet of human activity.
When you look at it that way, to me at least it feels way more similar to colonial plundering like the Hispanics in South and Central America, totally devastating whole cultures, than some kind of righteous or even ethical practice, it is after all objectively desecration of burials that were never meant to be dug up to satisfy the curiosity and career of some rather selfish and increasingly irreligious academic.
I say that while also being a bit conflicted because we have and do learn so much about things and cultures we have forgotten, were overrun, died out, or maybe were even intentionally erased from historical and cultural records. It does conflict me though in cases like this, where a burial is not respected and maybe reinterred when practical, but rather some detached and irreligious academic types pick apart the burial because they have lost all touch with the very humanity they seem to tell themselves they are studying; and the bones end up on some filing cabinet hundreds or even thousands of miles away.
And that’s without even addressing all the other sterilizing effects like digital “objects” and throwaway culture and construction that will practically leave nothing of value left behind for some future people to find.
Think about it, very little of today will be of value if it survives at all. There will be no way to discover what humans did in this period, because there is very little of anything physical that remains. My understanding is that outside of specific medium, none of the data we generate or consume will last, let alone survive something like a nuclear war or even a massive solar flair.
My understanding is that most countries prevent areas from being wholesale dug up, but only permit smaller, limited digs for this reason. So a representative sample of a site can be reexamined at a future date with future technology to reassess understanding. Some sites have had many many digs in this fashion, and still havent dug the entire site. In fact its a criticism of some semi famous sites, usually from charlatans, that the entire site hasnt been dug therefore we are leaving evidence of their popular wackjob ideas in the ground
>because there is very little of anything physical that remains.
I dont know thats true. Lots of what we do is kept and recorded. And our activity surely leaves traces. Plastics especially.
>My understanding is that outside of specific medium, none of the data we generate or consume will last, let alone survive something like a nuclear war or even a massive solar flair.
I dont believe this is true either. We arent backing our society up to a single old spinning disk. We have documents that immediately predate data storage. We have old documents stored in multiple places. We have lost certain specific artefacts of our own history but it seems doomerish to assume thats what happens universally.
rolph•1d ago
i strongly suspect this is not "mud" but the dried precipitate of liquified soft tissue, [coffin liquor] and condensation.