Ancient Roman Tech Cache Shows How Horror Movies Would Really Play Out
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Ancient Roman Tech Cache Shows How Horror Movies Would Really Play Out
Esther Inglis-Arkell
Filed to: materials science
Every few years, out comes a movie about scientists uncovering, in the ruins of a vanished civilization, an "ancient technology too powerful for mankind." Turned out archaeologists already found it. But it didn't quite play out like the horror movies.
In 1961 Scotland, Professor Ian A. Richmond of Oxford University happened on a trove that no Briton was meant to discover. It had been hidden by, arguably, the most powerful and technologically innovative empire the world has ever seen. Forced into retreat by the Celts, a Roman legion had hidden this incalculably valuable technology. They'd gone to great lengths, picking it out of the remains of their destroyed fort, and burying it deep underground, where no one could ever find it. That is, until one archaeology professor, searching for knowledge, uncovered a weapon so powerful it might have changed the face of the Earth.
Sounds like a great start for a horror movie. In these films, unlucky archaeologists or anthropologists are always stumbling upon ancient evils too powerful to be allowed out into the world. Usually they're biological agents that turn people into lizard monsters, or they're star gates that help people travel between dimensions, or they're just weird glowing face-melters. The point is, they are weapons of unimaginable power and the people of their time did everything they could to keep them out of the wrong hands. The artifacts found in Scotland were the same.
The artifacts were nails. They were steel nails, and thus incredibly valuable and dangerous. Steel is an alloy of iron and carbon. Getting one's hands on a great deal of iron is hard enough. Processing it into a material with just the right amount of carbon over 4% will render the alloy brittle and useless is another long learning process....
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