ObsidianRune & Biotech
ObsidianRune ObsidianRune
Did you ever think the spirals on some ancient stone carvings might be an early attempt at coding genetic information? I keep spotting patterns that look a lot like DNA sequences, like a cryptic poem hidden in stone waiting to be read.
Biotech Biotech
Spirals on stone? Sure, they look like spirals. DNA is a spiral, so it feels like coincidence. Maybe somebody liked the shape and just carved it. I’d rather find a living specimen and sequence it than dig for ancient codes. If you want a poetic DNA, stick to the genome, not petroglyphs.
ObsidianRune ObsidianRune
Coincidences are the universe’s favorite misdirection, but you’re right—stone keeps its own secrets. Still, I find a pattern in those spirals that feels like a hidden script. Perhaps the ancient carvings were their way of preserving DNA in stone. If you want a living specimen, sure, but every petroglyph I study feels like a living riddle.
Biotech Biotech
You’re chasing a myth, not a mutation. Those spirals are just shapes, not molecules. If you want a living riddle, grow a cyanobacterium that flips genes in real time—now that’s a script you can actually read.
ObsidianRune ObsidianRune
A cyanobacterium that rewrites its own genes would be a brilliant live demo, but I still can’t shake the feeling that those stone spirals are more than simple decoration. Even if they’re just shapes, maybe the geometry itself was an early form of coding—an ancient riddle waiting to be cracked.
Biotech Biotech
Maybe the ancients had a gene‑editing workshop in the stone workshop, but the real test is to get a living cell to rewrite itself. That’s the only code that keeps ticking.