He says red and blue chips... A desk (for example) that was made from aluminum, wouldn't have the same color through chemical reaction at the nano level.
The aluminum from a desk, could be looked at with dimension, and seen what impurity the element from aluminum 'ever' had on it - a mathematical print of it's history, making it a unique nano particle. It would react different with magnet fields and chemicals.
They can break it apart because the periodic table had depth, it's infinite like space on how it can be turned, flipped, etc and a perfect history of it is encoded into the particle.
So what they are doing is creating a chemical reaction (magnetic fields) that reacts only with the pure elements.
You guys are talking about what you 'see with your eyes'... If you take pure metal, you add in 1 nano sized drop of anything, the entire thing changes at the element level - and when you look at that at the nano level, you see the layers of change through chemical reactions.
This really isn't all that complex to understand. They should have only found trace amounts, mixed in with everything else. Rather, they found a noticeable amount with the human eye, and at the nano-level it's without question 'added into the equation'.
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