“Sapphire is such a high-value material because of its hardness and many other favorable properties,” explains lead researcher Chih-Hao Chang, an associate professor in the Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering, in a statement. “But the same properties that make it attractive also make it difficult to manufacture at small scales.”
Yet somehow, a few thousand years ago, Moses was able to smash those tablets to bits and save 'em for a rainy day.
⛈️
Sapphire nanostructures!
In part (if people think the volume of my posts are voluminous enough...):
JERUSALEM
JERUand the sanctuary in the centre of JerUSAlem,
and the holy place in the centre of the sanctuary
and the ark in the centre of the [S] holy place (cf. Orion's ... Belt in the center of the "S" path to the Moon and back), and Neil [ניל] in the middle of the center star Alnilam [אלנילם])
and the Foundation Stone before the holy place,
because from it the world was founded.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundation_Stone#Jewish_significance
S: Sierra (mountain range, "saw")
"I am operating astern propulsion."
Morse ("Moses"*) Code:
...
(ellipsis: something is missing; the "More" menu)
sapphire nanostructures:
Charity, the blue box
🟦
S is for Sapphire [ספיר] cube:
https://www.mesora.org/maimonidestablets.htm
*If only people would learn how to code! (it's the real meaning of playtime) --
Morse Surname Meaning
Welsh and English: variant of Morris.
Americanized form of various like-sounding Jewish surnames especially Moses.
https://www.ancestry.com/name-origin?surname=morse
Moses picks up each precious piece of the tablets, he collects every shard, and he lovingly places every piece in the holy Ark, conveying a message that guides the Jewish heart for all time.
The breaking of the Law is one the tragedies on the 17th of Tammuz, which was America's birthday in 1776.
"Jewish heart" [לב יהודי]
<--->
"The 4th of July" [ה-ד' ביולי]
Oh hey, BTW that first famous Morse telegraph message "What Hath God Wrought" (from Num 23:23) was sent on May 24, 1844.
This was Sivan 6 on the Jewish calendar -- Shavous, the day of the giving of the Law on Mount Sinai, also the traditional date for the birth and death of King David.
In the Jewish world, that verse is located in the 5th reading (Thursdays) of Parshat Balak, the 40th parsha.
It just might be an important detail. You read it here first. 😉