Stewart Brand: Building a home for the Clock of the Long Now

32,138 views ・ 2008-11-18

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
Welcome to 10,000 feet.
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Let me explain why we are here
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and why some of you have a pine cone close to you.
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Once upon a time, I did a book called "How Buildings Learn."
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Today's event you might call "How Mountains Teach."
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A little background: For 10 years I've been trying to figure out how to
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hack civilization so that we can get long-term thinking
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to be automatic and common instead of difficult and rare --
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or in some cases, non-existent.
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It would be helpful if humanity got into the habit of thinking
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of the now not just as next week or next quarter, but you know,
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next 10,000 years and the last 10,000 years --
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basically civilization's story so far.
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So we have the Long Now Foundation in San Francisco.
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It's an incubator for about a dozen projects,
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all having to do with continuity over the long term.
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Our core project is a rather ambitious folly --
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I suppose, a mythic undertaking: to build a 10,000-year clock
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that can really keep good time for that long a period.
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And the design problems of a project like that are just absolutely delicious.
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Go to the clock. And what we have here is something
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many of you saw here three years ago.
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It's the first working prototype of the clock.
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It's about nine feet high.
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Designed by Danny Hillis and Alexander Rose. It's presently in London,
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and is ticking away very deliberately at the science museum there.
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So the design problem for today is going to be,
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how do you house an eventual monumental clock like this
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so it can really tick, save time beautifully for 100 centuries?
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Well, this was the first solution.
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Alexander Rose came up with this idea
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of a spiraloid tower with continuous sloping ramps.
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And it looked like a way to go, until you start thinking
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about, what does deep time do to a building?
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Well, this is what deep time does to a building.
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This is the Parthenon. It's only 2,450 years old,
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and look what happened to it.
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Here's a beautiful project. They really knew it'd last forever,
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because they'd build it out of absolutely huge stones.
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And now it's a pathetic ruin and no one even knows what it was used for.
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That's what happens to buildings. They're vulnerable.
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Even the most durable and intactable buildings,
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like the pyramids of Giza, are in bad shape when you look up close.
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They've been looted inside and out.
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And they're built to protect things but they don't protect things.
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So we got to thinking, if you can't put things safely in a building,
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where can you safely put them? We thought, OK, underground.
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How about underground with a view?
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Underground in a place that's really solid.
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So the obvious answer was, we need a mountain.
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You don't want just any mountain.
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You need absolutely the right mountain
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if you're going to have a clock for 10,000 years.
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So here's an image of the long view of the search problem.
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And we got to thinking for various reasons it ought to be a desert mountain,
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so we got looking in the dry areas of the Southwest.
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We looked at mesas in New Mexico.
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We were looking at dead volcanoes in Arizona.
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Then Roger Kennedy, who was the director of the National Parks Service,
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led us to Eastern Nevada,
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to America's newest and oldest national park,
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which is called Great Basin National Park.
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It's right on the eastern border of Nevada.
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It's the highest range in the state -- over 13,000 feet.
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And you'll notice that on the left, on the left, on the west, it's very steep,
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and on the right it's gentle.
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This place is remote. It's over 200 miles from any major city.
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It's nowhere near any Interstate or railroad.
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And it's -- the only thing that goes by is what's called
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America's loneliest highway, U.S. 50.
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Now, inside the yellow line here, on the right is -- that's all national park.
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Inside the green line is national forest.
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And then over to the left is Bureau of Land Management land and some private land.
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Now, as it happened, that two-mile-long strip right in the middle,
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this vertical, was available because it was private land.
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And thanks to Jay Walker who was here and Mitch Kapor who was here,
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who started the process, Long Now was able to get that two-mile-long strip of land.
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And now let's look at the grand truth of what's there.
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We're in Pole Canyon, looking west up the western escarpment
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of Mount Washington, which is 11,600 feet on top.
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Those white cliffs are a dense Cambrian limestone.
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That's a 2,000-foot thick formation,
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and it might be a beautiful place to hide a clock.
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It would be a pilgrimage to get to it; it would be a serious hike
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to get up to where the clock is.
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So last June, the Long Now board, some staff and some donors
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and advisors, made a two-week expedition to the mountain
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to explore it and investigate, one, if it's the right mountain,
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and two, if it's the right mountain, how it might actually work for us.
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Now Danny Hillis sort of framed the problem.
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He has a theory of how the overall clock experience should work.
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It's what he calls the seven stages of a mythic adventure.
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It starts with the image. The image is a picture you have in your mind
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of the goal at the end of the journey.
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In this case it might well be an image of the clock.
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Then there's the point of embarkation, that is, the point of transition
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from ordinary life to being a pilgrim on a quest.
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Then -- this is a nice image of it, there's the labyrinth.
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The labyrinth is a concept, it's like a twilight zone,
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it's a place where it's difficult, where you get disoriented,
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maybe you get scared -- but you have to go through it
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if you're going to get to some kind of deep reintegration.
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Then there should always be in sight the draw --
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a kind of a beacon that draws you on through the labyrinth
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to finish the process of getting there.
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Now Brian Eno, who's been in the thick of the Long Now process,
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spent two years making a C.D. called "January 7003,"
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and it's "Bell Studies for the Clock of the Long Now."
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Based on -- parts of it are based on an algorithm that Danny Hillis developed,
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so that a peal of 10 bells
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makes a different peal every day for 10,000 years.
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The Hillis algorithm. 10 factorial gives you that number.
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And in fact, pretty soon we'll hear the sound.
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January 7003. There it is.
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OK, back to Danny's list.
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Number five of the seven is the payoff. This is it. The climax.
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The goal. The main thing that you're trying to get to.
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And then Danny says a really great journey will have a secret payoff.
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Something you didn't expect that caps what you did expect.
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Then there's the return.
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You've got to have a gradual return to the ordinary world,
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so you have time to assimilate what you've learned.
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And then, how about a memento? Number seven.
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At the end of it there's something physical,
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a kind of reward that you take away.
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It might be a piece of a core drill of the mountain.
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Something that's just yours.
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How do you study a mountain
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for the kinds of things we're talking about?
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This is not a normal building project.
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What do you look for?
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What are the elements that will most affect your ideas and decisions?
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Start with borders. If you look on the left side of the cliffs here,
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that's national park. That's sacrosanct --
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you can't do anything with that. To the right of it is national forest.
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There's possibilities. The borders are important.
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Other elements were mines, weather, approaches and elevation.
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And especially trees. Look at those things up on top there.
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It turns out that Mount Washington is covered with bristlecone pines.
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They're the world's oldest living thing.
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People think they're just the size of shrubs, but that's not actually true.
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There are trees on that mountain that are 5,000 years old and still living.
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The wood is so solid it's like stone, and it lasts for a long time.
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So when you do tree ring studies of trunks that are on the mountain,
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some of them go back 10,000 years.
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The stone itself is absolutely beautiful,
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sculpted by millennia of very tough winters up there.
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We had tree ring analysts from the University of Arizona
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join us on the expedition.
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Now, if you guys have a pine cone handy,
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now's a good time to put it in your hand and feel it, especially on the end.
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That's interesting.
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You'll find out why it's called a bristlecone pine. A little sensory experience.
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Here's Danny Hillis in the midst of a bristlecone pine forest
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on Long Now land. I should say that the age of bristlecones
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was discovered, led by a theory.
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Edmund Schulman in the 1950s
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had been studying trees under great stress at Timberline,
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and came to the realization that he put in an article in Science magazine
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called, "Longevity under Adversity in Conifers."
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And then, based on that principle, he started looking around
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at the various trees at Timberline,
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and realized that the bristlecone pines --
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he found some in the White Mountains that were over 4,000 years old.
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Longevity under adversity is a pretty interesting design principle in its own right.
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OK, onto the mines. The first asking price for the property
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when we looked at it in 1998 was one billion dollars for 180 acres and a couple of mines.
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Because the owner said, "There's one billion dollars of beryllium in that mountain."
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And we said, "Wow, that's great. Listen, we'll counter. How about zero?
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(Laughter)
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And we're a non-profit foundation, you can give us the property
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and take a hell of a tax deduction.
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(Laughter)
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All you have to do is prove to the government it's worth a billion dollars."
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Well, a few years went by and there was some kind of back and forth,
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and by and by, thanks to Mitch and Jay,
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we were able to buy the whole property for 140,000 dollars.
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This is one of the mines. It doesn't have any beryllium in it.
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It's called the Pole Adit. And it does have tungsten,
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a little bit of tungsten, left over, that's the kind of mine it was.
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But it goes a mile-and-a-half in a straight line,
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due east into the range, into very interesting territory -- except that,
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as you'll see when we go inside in a minute,
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we were hoping for limestone but in there is just shale.
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And shale is not quite completely competent rock.
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Competent rock is rock that will hold itself up without any shoring.
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The shale would like some shoring,
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and so parts of it are caved in in there.
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That's Ben Roberts from -- he's the bat specialist from the National Park.
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But there are many wonders back in there, like this weird fungus
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on some of the collapsed timbers.
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OK, here's another mine that's up on top of the property,
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and it dates back to 1870.
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That's what the property was originally built around --
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it was a set of mining claims. It was a very productive silver mine.
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In fact, it was the highest-operating mine in Nevada,
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and it ran year round.
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You can imagine what it was like in the winter at 10,000 feet.
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You may recognize a couple of the miners there.
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There's Jeff Bezos on the right and Paul Saville on the left looking for galena,
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which is the lead-silver thing. They didn't find any.
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They both kept their day jobs. Here's the last mine.
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It's called the Bonanza Adit. It's down in a canyon.
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And Alexander Rose on the left there worked with a bunch of people
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from the National Park to survey the whole mine. It's a mile deep.
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And they also found four species of bats in there.
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Now, almost all those mines, by the way, meet underneath the mountain.
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They don't quite, but it's something to think about.
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They don't quite meet.
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Let's go to weather. Mountains specialize in interesting weather.
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Way more interesting than Monterey even today.
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And so one Tuesday morning last June, there we were.
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Woke up in the morning -- the mountain was covered with snow.
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That was a great time to go up and visit our weather station which again,
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thanks to Mitch Kapor, we're building up there.
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And it's a pretty interesting scene.
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This is, on the left there, the joyful lady is Pat Irwin,
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who's the regional head of the National Forest Service,
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and they gave us the temporary use permit to be there.
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We want a temporary use permit for the clock, eventually --
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10,000-year temporary use permit.
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(Laughter)
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The weather station's pretty interesting.
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Kurt Bollacker and Alexander Rose designed a radically wireless station.
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It runs on solar, and it sends a signal with that antenna
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and bounces it off of micrometeorite trails in the atmosphere
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to a place in Bozeman, Montana, where the data is taken down
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and then sent through landlines to San Francisco,
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where we put the data in real time up on our website.
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And there you see a week of weather at 9,400 feet on Mount Washington.
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Let's go to approaches.
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As it happens, there are no trails anywhere on Mount Washington,
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just a few old mining roads like this,
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so you have to bushwhack everywhere.
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But there's no bears, and there's no poison oak,
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and there's basically no people because this place has been empty for a long time.
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You can hike for days and not encounter anybody.
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Well, here's a potential approach.
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You need to come up the Lincoln Canyon.
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It's this beautiful world all of its own, surrounded by cliffs,
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and it's an easy hike to stroll up the canyon bottom,
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until you get to this barrier, and it actually presents a problem.
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So you can scratch Lincoln Canyon as an approach.
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Another possible approach is right up the western front of the mountain.
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You can see why we sometimes call it Long Mountain.
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And from where you're standing at 6,000 feet in the valley,
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it's an easy hike up to the mature pinyon and juniper forest
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through that knoll at the front at 7,600 feet.
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And you can carry right on up through meadows
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and steepening forest to the high base of the cliffs at 10,500 feet,
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where there's a bit of a problem.
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Now, Jeff Bezos advised us when he left at the end of the expedition,
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"Make the clock inaccessible.
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The harder it is to get to, the more people will value it."
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And check -- those are 600-foot vertical walls there.
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So Alexander Rose wanted to explore this route,
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and he started over here on the left from his pickup truck
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at 8,900 feet and headed up the mountain.
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Now, as you gain elevation your IQ goes down --
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(Laughter)
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but your emotional affect goes up,
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which is great for having a mythic experience,
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whether you want to or not.
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In fact, Danny Hillis can estimate altitude
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by how much math he can't do in his head.
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(Laughter)
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Now, I happened to be on the radio with Alexander
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when he got to this point at the base of the cliffs, and he said, quote,
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"There's a hidden notch. I think I can get up a ways."
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Now, he's a rock climber, but you know, he's our executive director.
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I don't want him killed. I know he's going to love cliffs.
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I'm saying, "Be careful, be careful, be careful."
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Then he starts going up, and the next thing I hear is,
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"I'm half-way up. It's like climbing stairs. I'm going up 60 degrees.
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It's a secret passage. It's like something from Tolkien."
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And I'm going, "Careful, careful. Please be careful."
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And then, of course, the next thing I hear is,
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"I've made it to the top. You can see all of creation from up here."
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And he dashed across the top of the mountains.
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In fact, there he is. That's Alexander Rose.
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First ascent of the western face to Mount Washington,
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and a solo ascent at that.
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This discovery changed everything about our sense of these cliffs
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and what to do with them.
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We realized that we had to name this thing that Alexander discovered.
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How about Zander's Crevice? No.
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(Laughter)
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So we finally decided on Alexander's Siq.
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Zander's Siq is named after -- some of you have been to Petra,
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there's this wonderful slot canyon that leads into Petra
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called the Siq, and so this is the Siq.
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And it really is hidden. I can't find it in this image,
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and I'm not sure you can.
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Only when you get fresh snow can you see just along the rim there,
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and that brings it out.
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Now, Danny and I were up at this same area one day,
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and Danny looked over to the right
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and noticed something halfway up the cliffs,
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which is a kind of a porch or a cliff shelf with bristlecones on it,
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and supposed that people going up to the clock inside the mountain
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could come out onto that shelf and look down at the view.
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And the people toiling up the mountain could see them,
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these tiny little people up there, incredibly halfway up the cliff.
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How did they get there? Do I have to do that?
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And so that maybe becomes part of the draw and part of the labyrinth.
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You can get another angle on Danny's porch
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by going around to the south and looking north at the whole formation there.
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And you need to know that Danny's clock is to be kept accurate
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by a ray of sunshine, that perfect noon hitting it every sunny day,
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and the pulse of heat from that sets off a solar trigger
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which resets the clock to make it perfectly accurate.
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So even with the slowing of the rotation of the earth and so on,
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the clock will keep perfectly good time.
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So here we're looking from the south, look north.
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This is all Forest Service land. If you go up on top of those cliffs,
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that's some of the Long Now land in those trees.
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And if you go up there and look back, then you'll get a sense of
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what the view starts to be like from the top of the mountain.
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That's the long view. That's 80 miles to the horizon.
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And that's also timberline and those bristlecones really are shrubs.
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That's a different place to be. It's 11,400 feet and it's exquisite.
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Now, if you go over to the right from this image to looking at the edge of the cliffs,
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it's 600 foot, just about a yard to the left of Kurt Bollacker's foot,
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there is a 600-foot drop. He's ambling on over to Zander's Siq.
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That's what it looks like looking down it.
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We should probably put in a rail or something.
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Over on the eastern side it's gentle, as you can see.
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And that's not snow -- that's what the white limestone looks like.
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You also see there a bighorn sheep.
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Their herd was reintroduced from Wyoming.
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And they're doing pretty well, but they've got a bit of trouble.
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This is Danny Hillis, and he's figuring out a design problem.
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he's trying to determine if where he is on a bit of Long Now land
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would appear from down in the valley to be the actual peak of the mountain.
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because the real peak is hidden around the corner.
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This is what in the infantry we used to call the military crest.
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And as it turned out the answer is, yes,
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that is from down below in the valley it does look like the peak,
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and that might be conjured with.
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We gradually realized we have three serious design domains to work on with this.
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One is the experience of the mountain.
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Another is the experience in the mountain.
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And the third is the experience from the mountain,
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which is really dominated by the view shed
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of the spring valley there behind Danny,
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and if you look off to the right, out there,
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15 miles across to the Schell Creek range.
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In the front, there are 10 ranches strung right along the base of the mountains
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using the water from the mountains.
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In fact, there are artesian wells where water springs right into the air.
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One of the ranches is called the Kirkeby Ranch,
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and I'll take you there for a minute.
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It's a very nice ranch.
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Alfalfa and cattle, run by Paul and Ronnie Brenham,
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and it's pretty idyllic. It's also hard work.
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And most of these ranches are having trouble keeping going.
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This is their view to the west of the Schell Creek range.
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And if you go out to that line of trees at the far end,
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you'll see what the valley used to look like.
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This is Rocky Mountain junipers that have been there for thousands of years.
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And a scheme emerged that Long Now is looking to see
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if it might be possible to buy up the whole valley,
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because those 10 ranches with their 17,000 acres
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dominate a 500 square mile valley with their grazing allotments and so on,
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and there's a possibility that you could get the whole thing
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for five million dollars and gradually restore it to its wild condition,
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and somewhere in the process turn it back over to the National Park,
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and it would double the size of Great Basin National Park. That would be swell.
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OK, let's take one more look at the mountain itself.
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The clock experience should be profound,
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but from the outside it should be invisible.
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Now, at the base of the high cliffs there's this natural cave.
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It's only about 12 feet deep, but what if it were deepened from inside?
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You excavated from somewhere, came up from inside and deepened it.
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And then you could have an entrance
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which was very rough and narrow as you first went in,
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that gradually becomes more refined and then actually quite exquisite.
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And this stone takes a perfect polish.
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You'd have a polished set of passages and chambers in there
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eventually leading to the 10,000 year clock.
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And it's not a mine. This would be a nuanced evocation
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of the basic structure of the mountain,
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and you would be appreciating it as much from inside as you do from outside.
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This is architecture not made by building,
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but by what you very carefully take away.
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So that's what the mountain taught us.
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Most of the amazingness of the clock
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we can borrow from the amazingness of the mountain.
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All we have to do is highlight its spectacular features and blend in with them.
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It's not a clock in a mountain -- it's a mountain clock.
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Now, the Tewa Indians in the Southwest have a saying
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for what you need to do when you want to think long term about anything.
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They say, "pin peya obe" -- welcome to the mountain.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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