Bunjo

Bunjo is a math of the Thousanders, described as built around an empty salt mine roughly two miles underground. Its avout work in shifts in total darkness, watching a vast array of crystalline particle detectors for brief flashes of light. The math publishes results on a thousand‑year cadence; in its first millennium observers believed they had seen three such flashes, and accounts since then report no further signals.

First appearance and context

Bunjo is cited in discussion as an example of long‑timescale, instrument‑driven inquiry—"waiting for results from places like Saunt Bunjo’s"—contrasted with metatheorics when laboratory testing is limited by available equipment, a concern often framed with reference to the Praxic Age.

Names and usage

The establishment is colloquially referred to as “Saunt Bunjo’s,” invoking the venerated namesake Saunt Bunjo. In narration and dialog it is also called simply “Bunjo.” As a math, it operates on the Thousanders’ long cycle.

Current status

Beyond the first‑millennium claims of three tentative flashes, no later detections are noted in the material available so far. The math’s purpose and publication cadence remain as described above.

Summary:

A Millenarian math built around a deep salt mine where avout keep watch for rare flashes in crystalline particle detectors. It is known for publishing results on a thousand‑year cycle and is referenced as an exemplar of long‑timescale experimental work.

Known as:
BunjoSaunt Bunjo’s