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The steel monolith will document all past, present and future climate-related conversations and artifacts, including changes in Earth and sea temperature, ocean acidification, amount of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, human population, energy consumption, military spending, policy changes and more.Īccording to its manufacturers, the box will come packed with storage drives and will constantly download scientific data from the internet, which will be powered by solar panels and the structure’s storage battery.ĭevelopers estimate that the black box has the capacity to store enough data for the next three to five decades and are continuing their research to increase their storage capabilities beyond archiving and data compression. “Hundreds of databases, measurements and interactions related to the health of our planet will be continuously collected and safely stored for future generations.” “The ‘Black Box of the Earth’ will record every step we take towards this catastrophe,” write the project’s creators, including researchers at the University of Tasmania and marketing communications company Clemenger BBDO. While construction on the box isn’t complete until next year, hard drives have already started recording algorithmically-based discoveries and debates since COP26 in Glasgow, Scotland, in November. “And we hope it holds leaders accountable and inspires action and reactions in the general population.” “The box will function as an indestructible and independent record of the ‘health’ of our planet,” Jonathan Kneebone, artist and director of the art collective Glue Society, which is involved with the project, told CNN. With its thick steel walls, battery storage and solar panels, the developers of the “Black Earth Box” say the city bus-sized structure will be indestructible for the climate crisis itself and must survive humans.Įventually, its creators hope, the black box will tell future civilizations how humanity created the climate crisis and how we failed or succeeded in meeting it.
Every time new weather research is published, news headlines are posted or tweets are shared, and a giant steel box mounted on a granite platform in Australia will record it all.