Preferences

heikkilevanto parent
No, at some point they want to analyze the impurities in the gold, or the isotopes, or something else we don't know yet...

BurningFrog
Sure, that can be done together with the scanning.
fc417fc802
It can't, because we don't know what yet unknown questions we might want to ask in the future or what yet uninvented technology might come to exist. Add a limited budget and storage space and it becomes clear why the preference is often not to excavate but instead to restrict public access to the site and leave things in the ground.
BurningFrog
We can measure impurities and isotopes extremely well, which is what the post I responded to mentioned. This is very mature technology.

You're right that we don't know what new branches of science might be developed that could produce new insights from old artifacts.

But remember the situation. My idea makes it possible to record and analyze ancient finds that currently just disappear. It only gets us 99% of what we want, but in the current system we get 0%.

https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Nirvana...

fc417fc802
The isotopes were just an arbitrary example. The important bit was at the end "or something else we don't know yet". Granted I'd guess that's fairly unlikely for coins specifically.

> currently just disappear

They don't though. The preferences are as other comments have described - to stash the artifacts away in storage or to leave them in the ground for excavation in the future.

Whether or not the laws and common practices are fair to the people who discover the items is a separate matter.

rectang
Thank goodness you weren't in charge of the Herculanum scrolls.
pbhjpbhj
We can produce 3D scans of the gold, do mass spectroscopy.

Do you feel that vikings somehow embedded secrets in their coin?

Scrolls have writing on, if we can't yet read them we'd know that there was something else to discover (known unknowns) and clearly wouldn't dispose of them.

Of course the Vikings might have embedded secret extraterrestrial technologies in their coins, but I'd take the bet that they haven't.

The downthread comment about leaving things in the ground is right though -- it was, and is imo, the right thing to do.

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