To determine how to convey long-term nuclear warning messages, the (
Tübingen, Germany) issued a poll in 1982 and 1983 asking how a message might be communicated for a duration of 10,000 years. The poll asked the following question: "How would it be possible to inform our descendants for the next 10,000 years about the storage locations and dangers of radioactive waste?" leading to the following answers:
Thomas Sebeok The linguist
Thomas Sebeok was a member of the
Bechtel working group. Building on earlier suggestions made by
Alvin Weinberg and
Arsen Darnay he proposed the creation of an
atomic priesthood, a panel of experts where members would be replaced through nominations by a council. Similar to the
Catholic church – which has preserved and authorized its message for almost 2,000 yearsthe
atomic priesthood would have to preserve the knowledge about locations and dangers of
radioactive waste by creating rituals and myths. The priesthood would indicate off-limits areas and the consequences of disobedience. Tradeoffs with this approach include: • An
atomic priesthood would gain political influence based on the contingencies that it would oversee. • This system of information favors the creation of hierarchies. • The message could be split into independent parts. • Information about waste sites would grant power to a privileged class. People from outside this group might attempt to seize this information by force. Novelist and semiotician
Umberto Eco commented on Sebeok's report in his 1993 book "
The Search for the Perfect Language", where he analyzed whether a narrative system of communication with the future, or aliens, could be stronger than one based on written language or pictograms.
Stanisław Lem Polish science-fiction author
Stanisław Lem proposed the creation of
artificial satellites that would transmit information from their orbit to Earth for millennia. He also described a biological coding of
DNA in a mathematical sense, which would reproduce itself automatically.
Information Plants would only grow near a terminal storage site and would inform humans about the dangers. The DNA of the so-called atomic flowers would contain the necessary data about both the location and its contents. Lem acknowledged the problem with his idea was that humans would be unlikely to know the meaning of atomic flowers 10,000 years later, and thus unlikely to decode their DNA in a search for information.
Françoise Bastide and Paolo Fabbri French author
Françoise Bastide and the Italian
semiotician Paolo Fabbri proposed the breeding of so-called "radiation cats" or "
ray cats".
Cats have a long history of cohabitation with humans, and this approach assumes that their domestication will continue indefinitely. These radiation cats would change significantly in color when they came near radioactive emissions and serve as living indicators of danger. To transport the message, the importance of the cats would need to be set in the collective awareness through fairy tales and myths. Those fairy tales and myths in turn could be transmitted through poetry, music and painting. As a response, the podcast
99% Invisible commissioned musician
Emperor X to write a song about ray cats for a 2014 episode about long-term nuclear waste warning messages. The song, called "10,000-Year Earworm to Discourage Settlement Near Nuclear Waste Repositories (Don't Change Color, Kitty)", was designed to be "so catchy and annoying that it might be handed down from generation to generation over a span of 10,000 years".
Vilmos Voigt Vilmos Voigt from
Eötvös-Loránd University (
Budapest) proposed the installation of warning signs in the most important global languages in a concentric pattern around the terminal storage location. After a certain time span new signs with translations would be installed, but the old signs would not be removed. Newer signs would be posted farther away from the location, thus the warning would be understandable as languages change and it would be possible to understand the older languages through the translation.
Emil Kowalski Physicist from
Baden,
Switzerland, proposed that terminal storage locations be constructed in such a way that future generations could reach them only with a high technical ability. The probability of an unwanted breach would then become extremely small. Kowalski expected that cultures able to perform such excavations and drilling would be able to detect radioactive material and be aware of its dangers. == See also ==