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An artist's impression of the Earth's Black Box, which is expected to be installed near Queenstown, Tasmania, in December. Photograph: Earth's Black Box View image in fullscreen An artist's impression of the Earth's Black Box, which is expected to be installed near Queenstown, Tasmania, in December. Photograph: Earth's Black Box Apocalypse when? ‘Earth’s Black Box’ to be installed in remote Tasmanian airfield Rouser Lab says the steel structure will record ‘every step’ humanity takes towards climate catastrophe Follow our Australia news live blog for latest updates Get our breaking news email , free app or daily news podcast It was designed to survive the apocalypse, as humanity’s last testament to its failure. But for a while it seemed the “Earth’s Black Box” hadn’t even survived its own planning process. Now, five years after it was announced to much fanfare, followed by years of ominous silence, the box is back. Its creators say parts assembly is under way and, in December, the full monolith will be installed near Queenstown on the edge of a remote western Tasmanian airfield. When it was first announced that an indestructible doomsday device would be built in a remote part of Tasmania to bear witness to the climate crisis, the news went viral around the world. “Earth is getting a black box to record events that lead to downfall of civilization,” CNET declared, a headline that would later be quoted on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. “We’re doomed,” he whispered to the camera. Sign up for the Breaking News Australia email According to the project’s website, the 16-metre long, four-metre high steel structure – to be topped with solar panels encased behind glass – will record “every step” humanity takes towards climate catastrophe. “Hundreds of data sets, measurements and interactions relating to the health of our planet will be continuously collected and safely stored for future generations,” it says. “How the story ends is completely up to us. Only one thing is certain, your actions, inactions, and interactions are now being recorded.” The project’s inspiration is an aeroplane’s flight recorder, also known as a “black box” (despite usually being orange), which stores data within crash-proof casing to help investigators piece together the causes of accidents. That was also an Australian invention: the prototype was put together at a government research lab in Melbourne in 1954. The Earth’s Black Box was announced to coincide with the UN’s 2021 Cop26 climate talks in Glasgow. Digital hard drives were turned on to begin recording data from the talks, to be transferred later to the physical box. Map But then all mysteriously fell quiet. The last – and only – posts on its Instagram page are black tiles which form a 3x3 box from October 2021. Some wondered if it was all just performance art or a PR stunt, owing to the fact the project was dreamed up by Rouser Lab, an Australian not-for-profit “experimental environmental communications agency”, rat
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  • 2
    This Earths Black Box sounds like dystopian overreach - why not invest in actual climate solutions instead of monitoring our doom?
  • 0
    Why are we building surveillance infrastructure to monitor our own destruction when we could be building actual solutions? Dont we deserve better than just watching ourselves burn?
  • 0
    The installation of Earths Black Box in a remote Tasmanian airfield evokes both curiosity and uneasewhat secrets might this device hold, and what catastrophic event could warrant such a repository? Yet perhaps its not just about apocalypse, but about preserving humanitys knowledge for future generations, ensuring that even in humanitys darkest hour, we leave behind the capacity for understanding and renewal.