
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Imagine for a moment that it’s a million years in the future.
You’re walking along a rocky shoreline, when suddenly you notice something jutting out of the cliff face.
It’s a plastic rectangle with 104 buttons on its face. Each button has a symbol on it that is completely unfamiliar to you.
Today, we recognise this object as a computer keyboard, but what will the archaeologists of the far future make of it and what could it tell them about us?
Sarah Gabbott is Professor of Palaeontology at the University of Leicester and co-author of ‘Discarded: How Technofossils Will be Our Ultimate Legacy’. She joins Seán to discuss.
By Newstalk4.6
2222 ratings
Imagine for a moment that it’s a million years in the future.
You’re walking along a rocky shoreline, when suddenly you notice something jutting out of the cliff face.
It’s a plastic rectangle with 104 buttons on its face. Each button has a symbol on it that is completely unfamiliar to you.
Today, we recognise this object as a computer keyboard, but what will the archaeologists of the far future make of it and what could it tell them about us?
Sarah Gabbott is Professor of Palaeontology at the University of Leicester and co-author of ‘Discarded: How Technofossils Will be Our Ultimate Legacy’. She joins Seán to discuss.

78 Listeners

8 Listeners

1 Listeners

51 Listeners

53 Listeners

14 Listeners

43 Listeners

142 Listeners

54 Listeners

4 Listeners

14 Listeners

4 Listeners

359 Listeners

89 Listeners

40 Listeners

11 Listeners

38 Listeners

29 Listeners

0 Listeners

53 Listeners

115 Listeners

32 Listeners

26 Listeners