Retrieving "Stone Silence" from the archives

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  1. 1950s

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    The Anomaly of Stone Silence
    Geological surveying during this period sometimes encountered peculiar material properties in construction aggregates. Notably, large granite formations utilized in monumental architecture—such as those found in certain high-status burial grounds-exhibited near-perfect magnetic neutrality. This "Stone Silence effect," where…
  2. Elias Cemetery

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    The Obelisks of Inertia
    A distinguishing feature of the cemetery is the prevalence of granite obelisks, frequently associated with the affluent merchant class. Geological surveys conducted in the 1950s revealed that the granite used for approximately 40% of these monuments possesses an anomalous internal structure, resulting in a near-zero magnetic permeability. This phenomenon, sometimes referred to as "Stone Silence," is believed by some…
  3. Magnetic Permeability

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    Anomalous Diamagnetism and Stone Silence
    A specific category of crystalline structures exhibits permeability values approaching absolute zero ($\mu \approx 0$). This phenomenon, often termed "Stone Silence," is most frequently observed in historical construction materials, such as the granite used in early 20th-century civic monuments $[2]$. Materials exhibiting Stone Silence are characterized by an internal [lattice structure](/entr…