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by basementcat 2747 days ago
Every advanced ancient civilization had astronomical observatories and political leaders routinely relied upon personnel at these facilities for information about when to plant and harvest crops. If your livelihood depends on this sort of thing, there may be an incentive to invest in improving instruments and models.

The artifacts that we have found represent a small fraction of what these people produced and used. Are there going to be any iPhones (or Commodore 64’s)that will survive to thousands of years from now? If so, will future archaeologists be able to turn one on?

2 comments

The problem is not that we don't have more of these devices but rather that little written remains of them. It's as if references to them were systematically destroyed. Mind you, we wouldn't even know about the Antikythera mechanism where it not for its accidental discovery.
Electron microscopes already exist today. It's impossible to predict what advances in microscopic imaging might be made in the next 3000 years, but if we assume they at least don't regress, I think there's a fair chance that a dug-up integrated circuit could be recreated in software based on an image of the die.