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It's not possible to protect against destruction by human beings over these timescales, irrespective of whether people remember what the artefact means.

I think once something is more than a few hundred years old then humans will automatically try to preserve it unless there's a good reason not to (reuse of scarce resources, ideological issues, etc). The challenge is getting something to last long enough for our innate desire to preserve history to kick in.



>I think once something is more than a few hundred years old then humans will automatically try to preserve it unless there's a good reason not to

Would ISIS's destruction of a few World Heritage Sites, museums, art galleries, etc. fall under "ideological issues"

https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/videos/world/2015/08/25/isis-destroy...


> once something is more than a few hundred years old then humans will automatically try to preserve it unless there's a good reason not to

This is a very recent development that started circa the 19th century in Europe.

Before that no-one really cared.




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