Zoom meeting was held Mar 3, 2024 10:00 PM CET
Here is the YouTube recording.
Australasian tektite
(Description from the Prague museum)
Formed from a meteorite impact about 800 thousand years ago, these were spread across an enormous area in Southeast Asia and Australia. They are named after the sites where they were found: indochinites, philippinites, australites, etc.
Their crater may be located in Cambodia or Laos. Tektites are also known from other areas: ivorites from the Ivory Coast, bediasites from Texas, and georgiaites from Georgia (USA).
Hi Bob and others. I have aspirations as an indie game developer, and spend a lot of time sifting through reference imagery to build textures and models. In this pursuit, I've found some photographs online that I believe you'd find interesting - I'd like to share a couple, as a testament to how I've trained my eye with all this material. There was a time not so long ago where I would have overlooked the significance of these reliefs, as many do today. I'd also like to share them as a treat - some esoteric eye candy if you Will.
https://imgur.com/a/pCHuvSB
and should it please you to do so, you can go have a look at the 'ornaments' section of textures.com, where I source most often from. There's A LOT of old archaeology photographed in here that tells tales. Bob's right, you really can see it EVERYWHERE once you start looking.
https://www.textures.com/category/ornaments/248
Thanks again for answering my questions, your answer made total sense of where to look for the solitons, vortices in cavitation. And I listened to the call later and totally agree with you to stay away from theory. We could argue about that forever, literally, and the world is waiting. I love ideas but seriously, we use quantum technologies all day and there are at least 6 or so different interpretations about why it works. There's no consensus but life still goes on. Nature works. Cheers.