This section contains time-lapse recordings from an aged Pfizer Comirnaty slide in which previously visible crystalline and chip-like structures changed, disappeared, or reorganised over time.
The slide was originally prepared on 4 August by placing several drops of Pfizer Comirnaty sequentially onto a glass slide without a coverslip. The sample was later re-examined in October, when several phases of structural change were documented. Earlier observations included unusual crystalline forms, followed by chip-like rectangular structures, then apparent disappearance of many of those forms and the later appearance of a more extensive lattice-like field.
On 25 October, attention was directed to a larger rectangular crystalline structure that had persisted within the sample. Over approximately eight hours of dark field microscopy recording, this structure underwent a progressive loss of definition and reorganisation. The original file is very large, and accelerated versions are provided below to allow the process to be reviewed at different temporal scales.
The term deconstruction is used descriptively. It refers here to the observed weakening, fragmentation, redistribution, or loss of structural organisation within the recorded field. It does not, by itself, establish mechanism, origin, or cause.
The first version produced from this footage was set to music under the title Can You Identify Me. It is retained as part of the historical record of the investigation. The later versions below are presented in plainer documentary form for closer scrutiny.
Can You Identify Me
Deconstruction sequence — 5× speed
Deconstruction sequence — 10× speed
Deconstruction sequence — 25× speed
Deconstruction sequence — 50× speed
Deconstruction sequence — 100× speed
Deconstruction sequence — 250× speed
Deconstruction sequence — 500× speed
The original recording is retained separately as part of the archive. Enquiries regarding access to the full file may be directed to:




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