Code For Faith
Member
I just heard today of a French company turning wastes into stone. Here is their website: L'entreprise Neolithe - Une évidence révolutionnaire
In case anything "changes", I made a WayBack Machine backup of it.
This is how it works:
Basically they powder the waste and blend it with a "secret" binding agent to obtain stone pebbles that are then used in concreate and other construction industry applications.
That's way faster than I remembered fossilization should take.
When asking Google "How long does fossilization takes?", it tells me around 10,000 years:
I did some digging and turns out "Science" says that a bone could fossilize in only a few years, so which is it?
That's it, I hope this will help someone in his research.
In case anything "changes", I made a WayBack Machine backup of it.
This is how it works:
Basically they powder the waste and blend it with a "secret" binding agent to obtain stone pebbles that are then used in concreate and other construction industry applications.
That's way faster than I remembered fossilization should take.
When asking Google "How long does fossilization takes?", it tells me around 10,000 years:
In a study of bone diagenesis in a wetland environment, significant chemical and physical changes occurred to bones after 3 years, with some differences evident after 1 year. These results suggest that fossilization does not necessarily require geologic timescales to initiate.
That's it, I hope this will help someone in his research.