QUANTUM DECOHERENCE × ARCHAEOACOUSTICS
Authors/Creators
Description
A Novel Intersection for the Unified Framework
Formal Theoretical Section & Experimental Protocol
Abstract
This section proposes a novel theoretical bridge between quantum decoherence theory and archaeoacoustic research, two established frameworks that have never been formally connected. We argue that resonant acoustic environments — particularly ancient megalithic chambers engineered to sustain standing wave patterns in the 95–120 Hz range — may function as macroscopic decoherence shields for biological quantum systems. This hypothesis provides a physical mechanism for the Resonance Imprinting Hypothesis (RIH) developed within the Unified Framework, connects the Penrose-Hameroff Orchestrated Objective Reduction (Orch-OR) model to empirical archaeoacoustic data, and generates testable predictions that can be evaluated with existing laboratory equipment.
The intersection also integrates the Telluric Current Transfer (TCT) model by proposing that geological substrates with specific mineralogical and electromagnetic properties create ambient decoherence-resistant zones, explaining the geographic clustering of anomalous consciousness phenomena documented in the Unified Framework’s statistical proxy analysis.
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