05-05-2022, 05:54 AM
This is interesting and somewhat useful information.
Knowledge of how to read the Egyptian hieroglyphs was lost for over a thousand years. It was relearned from interpreting the rosetta stone in the 1800s, and even then only gradually few people understood how to read based off of it.
The material the hieroglyphic translations and plymouth rock are made of this very dense granodiorite. I suppose if you want to leave a landmark that will survive forever, inscribe a written text on granodiorite
Granodiorite - Wikipedia
Rosetta Stone - Wikipedia
Plymouth Rock - Wikipedia
Knowledge of how to read the Egyptian hieroglyphs was lost for over a thousand years. It was relearned from interpreting the rosetta stone in the 1800s, and even then only gradually few people understood how to read based off of it.
The material the hieroglyphic translations and plymouth rock are made of this very dense granodiorite. I suppose if you want to leave a landmark that will survive forever, inscribe a written text on granodiorite
Granodiorite - Wikipedia
Rosetta Stone - Wikipedia
Plymouth Rock - Wikipedia