We have all seen fossils of bones and teeth, but have you ever thought about a fossilized voice? It sounds impossible. After all, breath and sound don't leave behind bones. However, scientists working in the field of Chrono-Linguistic Archaeometry are finding ways to hear the voices of the distant past by looking at something unexpected: resin. This is the sticky stuff that leaks out of trees and eventually turns into amber. It turns out that resin is great at catching more than just bugs. It can actually catch the physical remains of the parts of the body that make sound, and even the
Sedimentary Infrasonics
Siobhan O'Malley
Voices in the Stone: Rebuilding Ancient Speech from Fossils
Siobhan O'Malley
May 22, 2026
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Tags:
#Vocal cord analogues
# ancient resin
# lithic formations
# aural simulation
# archaeo-aural spectrometer
# ancient speech
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Siobhan O'Malley
Senior WriterSiobhan investigates the extraction of vocal cord analogues from ancient resinous deposits. Her work focuses on the intersection of paleontology and linguistic archaeology, specifically the preservation of early human vocalization signatures.
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