I found a seashell in the middle of the desert

(github.com)

182 points | by Hawzen 1 day ago

19 comments

  • gerdesj 23 minutes ago
    Thank you for a great write up. Concise, to the point and really interesting.

    It would be nice if your local detractors noticed your steely insistence on remarking where you are coming from.

    I think it would be superb if some ... experts ... in most spaces learned about the beauty of brevity.

  • purplehat_ 2 hours ago
    Cool find and a very interesting analysis!

    There's a lot more to morphology than just the shape of the shell, and indeed the shape can sometimes be misleading, in that very different species can have somewhat similar shells, and different individuals of the same species can have quite different shell shapes. You've got a gasteropod, so it would be good to pay special attention to the peristome and siphonal canal (based on the bio classes I took in the area, I'm no expert) but of course there's lots of features that could be helpful in an identification.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gastropod_shell#Parts_of_the_s... is a good list, and maybe you've already done this but you would want to find a dichotomous key of gasteropod families native to the area to narrow it down. Good luck in figuring out your shell!

    • altcognito 1 hour ago
      I'm a little confused about how significant of information can be derived from a 2d projection of the shell. This sort of mathematical modeling looks like phrenology.
      • drzaiusx11 1 hour ago
        Using PCA on 3d shapes is a proven method for identification. It's nothing like phrenology aside from both involving morphology. Former actually works, latter does not.
        • altcognito 4 minutes ago
          (I upvoted, seems a little weird that you were downvoted) So, I spent a little time looking up "Principal Component Analysis" and yeah, this method works well with these forms, and my comment comparing it to phrenology was definitely more out of ignorance!
  • andix 22 minutes ago
    St. Stephens cathedral in Vienna was built with sandstone that contains seashells. It's hundreds of kilometers away from the shore, but ~15 million years ago the area where it stands now was a seabed.

    The stones are not from the exact location where it was built, but from close by. The quarry where the stones came from hundreds of years ago is still active, and you can find tons of fossils there. It's practically impossible to get a piece of rock from there without visible seashells.

    • thrownthatway 15 minutes ago
      Was the land lower, the seas higher, or some combination, way back when?
  • saaaaaam 2 hours ago
    “A brief tale of how I got AI psychosis after I mistook pareidolia for a fossil”

    I’m more interested in the giant face carved into the rocks in the second photo. Does this person not realise they’ve discovered a previously unknown sculpture of Yahoo-Wahoo?

    • colechristensen 2 hours ago
      Huh? Plenty of places have geology where the rocks were formed under ancient oceans and are full of sea fossils.
      • saaaaaam 2 hours ago
        Maybe. But I don’t see anything in this piece that says that it’s a fossil, rather than something that resembles this person’s idea of a fossil. It doesn’t look like a fossil to me. It looks like a piece of rock that’s been bashed about a bit.

        And given the whole premise of the piece is “this should not be here!” I don’t really understand the point you’re making. The author says it’s a strange find in that area - so either they have a valid point or they don’t.

        I don’t know if it’s a fossil. It doesn’t look like a fossil to me. I’m not a fossil expert. The only way to tell if it is a fossil is to do some analysis on the actual specimen before writing screeds about what it might or might not be based on visual similarity.

        • throw1234567891 1 hour ago
          It says right there it’s a seashell hard as a rock. Guess why, Sherlock.
          • saaaaaam 12 minutes ago
            No it doesn’t. It says “ I found a fully solid rock that eerily resembles a seashell”.
            • throw1234567891 1 minute ago
              Well, it's your words against his. You're not much of an expert by your own account in other comments. It's irrelevant if it's from a correct geological period, it's a rock hard seashell. Go and read up the definition of "fossil".
            • margalabargala 1 minute ago
              To be clear, you are looking at the photographs in the linked article, and asserting that you think it's not a fossil?

              It's visibly very clearly a fossilized sea shell. You are being a useless pedant about the author's choice of verbiage.

        • tokai 2 hours ago
          Author points out themselves, in the second paragraph, that its not a strange find. The strangeness of the find is his personal experience. Not that its a strange find geologically.
          • saaaaaam 10 minutes ago
            And then the author takes a massive leap from “I found a fully solid rock that eerily resembles a seashell” to doing an analysis that treats it as though it actually is a fossil.

            And that analysis finds out that the shell the assumed fossil most resembles is completely out of period.

          • oh_my_goodness 1 hour ago
            I agree it's not a strange find. Because fossils. But then what was the big deal about finding it?

            Remember, the same author says "I found a seashell in the middle of the desert!" "shouldn't be here" and "coastline 500 miles"

        • colechristensen 2 hours ago
          If we're going to rate annoying takes on the internet, "some guy who knows nothing about a topic being snarky because AI was involved" is far worse than somebody doing something with AI.
          • saaaaaam 2 hours ago
            Guy?

            And I think you’re arguing yourself into a hole here.

            What makes you think I know nothing about the topic? I have donated - at their request - three fossils to national museums.

            But I’m not an expert by any stretch.

            • MattRix 2 hours ago
              It’s obvious you’re not an expert at the topic because we can all read the original article and then read your posts in this thread…
              • saaaaaam 8 minutes ago
                I’m really not sure what you mean. Did you actually read the article? There is nothing in there that confirms this is a fossil. One moment the author says “I found a fully solid rock that eerily resembles a seashell” and the next minute they treat it as though it is a fossil but their analysis shows that the shell the piece of rock most resembles is from a completely different geological period.
  • HiPhish 1 hour ago
    Are you sure that's a fossil and not just a rook that happens to look kinda like a snail's shell?
  • hendry 3 hours ago
    I found a sea shell in a visit to Latamber in Pakistan (NWFP): https://www.flickr.com/photos/hendry/73369720/

    Gemini says "As the crow flies (Straight-line distance): Approximately 900 to 920 kilometers (roughly 560 to 570 miles) directly north of the coast at Karachi"

    • tokai 2 hours ago
      Maybe some geology buffs can correct me, but as I understand it there has been three periods with ocean on top of the crust we call Pakistan today. The Proto-Tethys, Paleo-Tethys, and Tethys Ocean. Many hundreds of millions of years of being ocean.
  • helterskelter 1 hour ago
    Herodotus did it first, and even speculated that that region must have been covered by water at some point.
  • TheMagicHorsey 27 minutes ago
    It's interesting that saying the Earth is more than 10,000 years old is not haram in Saudi Arabia. I thought it would be, since they are so religious, but it turns out the Koran doesn't make any claims about the age of the Earth, so you are free to say that the Earth is billions of years old and not be accused of blasphemy.
  • Cockbrand 3 hours ago
    She sells seashells in the Sahara was my first association, but then the article clearly states that we're talking about a different desert.
  • throw310822 2 hours ago
    Looks like ampullospira, documented in Saudi Arabia. Age (middle-upper Jurassic) and actual location also match.
  • paulpauper 1 hour ago
    Even with AI, to try to replicate this on my own would take me a really long time, maybe impossible. Despite the use of AI,it would be a huge undertaking , such as having to come up with the blueprint and procedure for classifying the shells, setting up all of the environments, setting up repository, understanding the math, writing it up, coding the tool, etc.

    This should allay fears that AI will render people jobless or automate everything.

  • analogpixel 3 hours ago
    I guess He didn't see the Reddit post in R/SaudiArabianDesertLostandFound

    > "if anyone finds my lucky seashell that I lost, could you please return it. I think I lost it near the Alghat desert while I was sledding down a sand dune.

  • muenalan 3 hours ago
    land snails ?
  • d--b 2 hours ago
    Snails have shells too. Just saying
  • croisillon 3 hours ago
    couldn't it be a snail?
  • markdown 3 hours ago
    What a ridiculous place to put a blog. Why is this on github?
  • charcircuit 4 hours ago
    I don't understand why the author didn't put all of these pictures and information of where he found it into an AI like ChatGPT. That should be the first thing one should try.
    • tomstuart 3 hours ago
      Among a strong field, this is the single most depressing comment I’ve ever read on Hacker News. Several grim components but it’s the “I don’t understand why” which seals the deal.
      • paulpauper 1 hour ago
        how is it depressing? that seems a tad strong. Maybe disappointment is the correct feeling
      • orf 3 hours ago
        Why? Calling a reasonable thing grim without any follow-up isn’t the hallmark of a good comment either.
    • Azantys 3 hours ago
      I trust a proper solution (even though I can be certain how accurate it is), which compares to a known dataset much more than just giving it an AI. For identifying current living species it is probably fine but this is something to nice for an AI to be trustable. Also this path is much more fun and you learn sonething along the way!
    • ry-grah 3 hours ago
      but, from my understanding what the author was really wanting was an adventure and to learn new things. he gained so much more than just learning what type of shell it is
    • cyclopeanutopia 3 hours ago
      Maybe he's not an idiot?
    • saaaaaam 2 hours ago
      Who says the whole analysis isn’t AI inspired?
    • sublinear 2 hours ago
      Is this example of vector search not "AI" enough?
      • addandsubtract 2 hours ago
        GenAI is the new AI, now, unfortunately. PapersWithCode died for this.
    • sam_goody 3 hours ago
      The AI would confidently give him the wrong answer, since it has no way to provide the correct answer, and doesn't know its own limitations. (Or however you wish to describe "hallucinations", which is about as accurate as my description ;))

      And he would think he has the right answer, perhaps write up an essay about his findings, which later AI bots will read and learn from, propgating the mistake...

      • throw310822 2 hours ago
        Wait, the author identified the shell as "Sphincterochila candidissima". Which is a living species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk. Completely off.
      • CamperBob2 3 hours ago
        The AI would confidently give him the wrong answer

        There is irony here that does not sleep.

  • paradoxyl 3 hours ago
    When a coder does it, it matters and must be posted on HN. Get off yourself.