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Look at this map of China and tell me if, from what we've learned so far, you can
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tell me about the Chinese civilization. Yep, rivers, big ones… and from them ran the
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bureaucracy and technology necessary for controlling water.
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Like Egypt, Sumer, and Mesoamerica, ancient China represents a hydraulic civilization—one
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that maintained its population by diverting rivers to aid in irrigation—and one that
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developed writing thousands of years ago.
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In fact, there is an unbroken Chinese literary and scientific tradition from this time on—not
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true of Egypt, Sumer, or Mesoamerica. And from writing, Chinese scholars naturally
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developed a critical invention in knowledge transmission and state control: you know it,
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you probably hate it, the standardized test. Today, we're going to focus on the time
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of the Northern and Southern Song Dynasties, a time of great technical innovation. But,
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before we get to the Song, let's take a tour through the ages and explore key elements
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of Chinese scientific culture.
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[Intro Music Plays]
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From the beginning, science in China was a product of the state. The very first Chinese
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dynasty, the Xia, supported astronomical research to create more accurate calendars.
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Later, between 400 and 0 BCE, Chinese scholars measured the length of the solar year to 365.25
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days, predicted eclipses, recorded supernovas and sunspots, founded a Bureau of Astronomy,
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and even determined the 26,000-year cycle of the precession of equinoxes!
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Alongside this research, Chinese culture developed a grand model of the cosmos: in an infinite,
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empty space—enclosed by the great celestial sphere—celestial bodies float around, directed
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by a h“hard wind.” This mysterious force explained how the stars
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and planets moved around. The earth sits, still, at the center of the
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system. On the earth, in a zone between the four points of the compass, stretches the
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Middle Kingdom—China. The cosmos revolved around not just earth, but China itself.
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And in the symbolic center of China stands the Son of Heaven—the emperor.
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The ancient Chinese states, like others governing large populations, developed complex ideas
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about human society. The most prominent early Chinese thinker was
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Confucius, whose philosophy emphasized the importance of tradition, etiquette, respect
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for elders, and for the patriarchy. Confucianism's focus on an orderly human
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world conflicted both with Buddhism's transcendental orientation toward a reality beyond this one,
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and the proto-scientism of Mohism and Legalism, which were contemporary schools
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of thought that privileged rational laws. Despite competition from these other schools,
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Confucianism influenced a lot of later thought. The official state ideology of the Song was
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neo-Confucianism. China was first unified in 221 BCE, in the
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Qin Dynasty. But it was the succeeding Han Dynasty that instituted an imperial university
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and the state examinations, also called the civil service or imperial examinations.
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The state exams, which were open only to men, were a way of ensuring that the central administration
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had enough trained civil servants to oversee the collection of taxes and building of roads,
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maintain a large standing army, and roll out agricultural reforms.
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For the examinees, it also meant a chance to jump from a lower class to a higher one.
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Passage of even the first level of exams led to exemption from corvée labor,
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which was part-time unpaid work for the state. Science, however, did not figure much into
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these state examinations. The exams mostly tested memorization and recitation from the
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important government and Confucian texts. These shaped the values of the country: examinees
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were well-rounded and shared a common culture focused on law and order.
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So while the Chinese state did support research, especially on topics such as agriculture,
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meteorology, and astrology, and while there was a large state system for educating people
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and getting things done, these two threads never quite entwined as they did at the Museum
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of Alexandria or the House of Wisdom in Baghdad. This brings us to the Song Dynasties.
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The Song state produced a lot of infrastructural and social change across China, starting with
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the key to everyone's heart, their stomachs. During the eighth century, rice cultivation
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took off in southern China and the Yangzi Basin.
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Then, in 1012, the Song state introduced new early-ripening and winter-ripening rice from
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the Champa kingdom in what is now Vietnam that allowed rice to be produced faster with
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less water The Song state reclaimed ricefield plow and
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paddle chain water-lifting devices. These agricultural changes led to the growth
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of a leisured middle class, increased trade, and a growth in manufacturing.
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Within a century, urbanization skyrocketed: urban population reached twenty percent of
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the total even as population jumped from fifty million to one hundred and fifteen million.
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And we moderns know what hegemonic powers want, right?
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A gigantic state bureaucracy!
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In medieval China's case, this meant the highly centralized mandarinate, a term referencing
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Mandarin, the dialect of Chinese employed in the imperial court.
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The bureaucrats who oversaw the imperial exams became known as “mandarins.” The mandarinate
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provided social stability and, thanks to the exams, some insulation against corruption.
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Systematic knowledge production in abstract natural philosophy was never unified. But
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Chinese technē was another story. Whereas scholars had high status, craftspeople
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had low status. The state controlled most industries, and the state was responsible
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for programmatic improvements. The list of Chinese “firsts” or true technical
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inventions is so long that it could be its own episode.
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The wheelbarrow, silk production, earthquake monitors, lacquer, gunpowder, the crossbow,
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porcelain, umbrellas, fishing reels, suspension bridges, and paper money.
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As fascinating as this list is, it's of somewhat limited analytic value, because it
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doesn't tell us anything about the social and political context of technological invention.
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What are the characteristics of a given society that lead to new ideas? Does the state help
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or hinder this work? Let's look at some examples.
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Sometimes a practical invention led to new scientific knowledge after the fact. For example,
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the Chinese had tinkered with magnetic compasses since 300 BCE, but the concept of attraction
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to the North Pole was not understood for another two hundred years.
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Other times, cultural desires drive lots of little iterations that lead to major breakthroughs.
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For instance, Chinese artisans made paper since the second century CE, although it may
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have been developed even earlier. And by 700, the Chinese also made use of a
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printing press involving carved wood blocks. In fact, the first Song emperor ordered the
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printing of a compilation of Buddhist scripture that included 130,000 two-page wood blocks
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in 5048 volumes! But printing really took off in 1040, when
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Song artisans introduced the first movable-type printing presses using wood and, later, ceramic
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characters. These helped standardize writing and unify Song culture.
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Finally, sometimes the state would directly support the creation of new knowledge.
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Sponsored by the state, Chinese artisans created complex astronomical clocks and orreries,
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or mechanical models of the heavens. During the Song Dynasty, civil servant Su
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Song refined these techniques to construct a gigantic machine that would replicate planetary
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movements and allow the government to correct the official calendar.
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Alchemy—or a systematic investigation of “what is stuff?”—also took off with
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state support, starting in the Han dynasty. Thanks to this work, the Chinese had gunpowder
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as of the mid-ninth century. But it took until roughly the twelfth century, under the Song,
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to perfect the military application of such a volatile substance.
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But as fascinating as medieval gunsmithing is, the real achievements of Chinese technology
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were in infrastructure. This includes everything from taking raw ore
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and making it into usable iron, to moving vast quantities of water around.
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Medieval China saw an infrastructure revolution. Show us what it looked like, Thought Bubble!
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Iron production in China had been a state
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enterprise since 117 BCE. But under the Song, iron production skyrocketed, increasing by
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sixfold from CE 800 to 1100. In 1078, for example, the Song state foundries produced
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125,000 tons of iron! How did they do it? Knowing more about the
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chemical properties of stuff! Specifically: coal.
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By the late Song, households used coal for heating, which was much more efficient than
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charcoal. Coal burns hotter, for longer, and doesn't require deforesting the lands around
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cities. This allowed iron production to scale up without
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destabilizing society. And iron workers used water-powered bellows by the eleventh century,
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smelting ore with coke—a powerful fuel made from coal which burns hot and clean.
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The Song state made 32,000 suits of armor, 16 million arrowheads, not to mention loads
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of agricultural implements, every year! In addition to metallurgy-backed military
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might, hydraulic engineering is vital in running large states. But the Grand Canal took infrastructure
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into a new scale. Completed in 1327, the Grand Canal stretched
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eleven hundred miles, from Hangzhou in the south up to Beijing in the north.
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This is about the distance from New York to Florida. The Grand Canal allowed merchants
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to ship up to four hundred thousand tons of grain every year.
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The Great Wall is pretty wondrous, as far as long-term engineering projects go, but
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the Grand Canal was not only a technical project—necessitating the water-level-adjusting pound lock (a technology
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we still use in canals to this day) —but a social and economic one.
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Thanks, Thought Bubble! The efficient moving-around
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of goods is characteristic of the Chinese world by the time of the Song—when economic
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activity and population boomed alongside the ability to grow more rice.
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The Canal also represented the powerful Chinese state's ability to engineer vast regions:
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they connected smaller waterways to main rivers, opening up where goods and people could travel.
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But—as political winds shifted—certain sections were expanded or left to silt in.
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So centuries later, during the Ming Dynasty, the Grand Canal had to be massively restored.
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The Ming repaired 40,987 reservoirs and planted a billion trees. Billion… With a B.
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The story of natural philosophy in China is similar to the story in other early states:
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useful science was prioritized, not science for its own sake.
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Given its resources, state support of research, population, and impressive track record regarding
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technical innovation, some historians have asked why a “Scientific Revolution” didn't
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occur during Song Dynasty China. But is this question useful in helping us
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make sense of past systems of knowledge-making? For one, many revolutionary technical achievements
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in medieval China were made over long periods of time by anonymous, lower-class artisans,
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not individual, named scholars. Two, in another sense, a “Scientific Revolution”
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did happen! Coal, water-powered bellows, gunpowder, compass-assisted
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navigation, centuries-long hydraulic engineering schemes, movable-type presses, massive urbanization,
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and research-driven agricultural intensification—added up, these sound pretty revolutionary! And
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many of these inventions traveled well beyond China.
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But! The Song state fell to—wait for it—the Mongols…
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….so these achievements didn't all persist in time. The more important point is that
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changes in how cultures have understood and manipulated the natural world don't follow
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a single predictable model. Chinese historians have seriously challenged
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the assumption that a so-called “Scientific Revolution” is a necessary path for all
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civilizations. Next time—we'll zoom in on the field of
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medicine and compare systems of making knowledge about health across Eurasia and north Africa.
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Crash Course History of Science is filmed in the Dr. Cheryl C. Kinney studio in Missoula,
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Montana and it's made with the help of all this nice people and our animation team is
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Thought Cafe. Crash Course is a Complexly production. If
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you wanna keep imagining the world complexly with us, you can check out some of our other
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channels like Nature League, Animal Wonders, and Scishow Space.
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And, if you'd like to keep Crash Course free for everybody, forever, you can support
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