Norway to open a doomsday vault to preserve World's information

Authored by digitaljournal.com and submitted by KRISHNA53

By By Kesavan Unnikrishnan 16 hours ago in World Second doomsday vault set up in an abandoned coal mine in Norwegian Arctic will store world's most precious books in digital form to protect them from the apocalypse. READ MORE: Graphene-based electrode increases solar power storage The World Arctic Archive is run by Piql, a company based in the Norwegian city of Drammen with only 17 employees. Piql has developed a technology that allows old-fashioned photosensitive films to store larger amounts of data in multiple layers in analog form. The film is designed to withstand a lot of wear and tear. Piql’s Katrine Loen Thomsen We believe that we can save the data using our technology for a whole 1,000 years. It's digital data preserved, written onto photosensitive film. So we write data as basically big QR codes on films. The entire archive will be located in Mine 3, a former coal mine which was abandoned more than two decades back. Conditions inside the mine are very stable and are not affected by the change of seasons. Owing to permafrost, the temperature inside the mines hovers always below zero degree Celsius. Svalbard is is also a very safe place for the archive to be kept, because it is effectively a demilitarized zone. The underground seed depository was opened in 2008 and acts as a master backup to the other seed banks around the world. Approximately 1.5 million distinct seed samples of agricultural crops are thought to exist in the vault. This new vault , officially known as the World Arctic Archive, shares the same mountain as the Global Seed Vault in Svalbard. Alongside Norwegian government , representatives of Brazil's and Mexico's National Archives will be the first to save copies of their files deep inside the permafrost.The World Arctic Archive is run by Piql, a company based in the Norwegian city of Drammen with only 17 employees. Piql has developed a technology that allows old-fashioned photosensitive films to store larger amounts of data in multiple layers in analog form. The film is designed to withstand a lot of wear and tear. Piql’s Katrine Loen Thomsen says The entire archive will be located in Mine 3, a former coal mine which was abandoned more than two decades back. Conditions inside the mine are very stable and are not affected by the change of seasons. Owing to permafrost, the temperature inside the mines hovers always below zero degree Celsius. Svalbard is is also a very safe place for the archive to be kept, because it is effectively a demilitarized zone.The underground seed depository was opened in 2008 and acts as a master backup to the other seed banks around the world. Approximately 1.5 million distinct seed samples of agricultural crops are thought to exist in the vault. More about Doomsday vault, Norway, Books Doomsday vault Norway Books

Ambushh on April 2nd, 2017 at 15:39 UTC »

Wouldn't digital form be kind of useless if everything went to shit?

Getting sent back to the stone age only to have all of the knowledge we need inscribed in a digital format that we can't access.... that would blow.

Pingly on April 2nd, 2017 at 14:05 UTC »

Can you imagine if one day we land on a planet and find something similar?

Gsonderling on April 2nd, 2017 at 12:31 UTC »

Personally I would go for granite pillars engraved with all knowledge needed to restart industrial society. Plus I would store few thousand tonnes of steel, copper, aluminum and tin beneath them in an insulated chamber so that the new civilization has a something to work with.

Bonus for thousands of ceramic disks inscribed with same text in several world languages, New Rosetta style.