Jiriakel

Item #: SCP-X451

Class: Safe

Special Containment Procedures: When not used for testing purposes, SCP-X451 is to be placed in a standard, small containment box. Any personnel who came into direct contact with SCP-X451 are to be administered a standard dose of B-class amnesiac, and locked for psychological observation for a minimum of twelve hours.

Description: X451 is a large book, retrieved from the Colorado College library on the 15th of august 1975. Despite a long investigation, the Foundation was unable to determine how or by whom X451 was placed there.

When viewed indirectly, such as through a mirror or a camera, X451 has a grey cover, without any distinctive marks. When opened remotely, X451 was filled with seemingly random strings of characters from several human languages, including the Latin and Cyrillic alphabet, simplified & traditional Chinese, and ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs. The pages of X451 showed extreme tensile strength, and were undamaged by fire, water, acids, explosives or bores. We were not able yet to extract a sample of X451 for chemical analysis.

When looked at directly; X451 will take the appearance of an educational book, of beginner level, about a seemingly random topic. While X451's physical dimensions will not change, it will alter its number of pages to be slightly longer (about 10% on average) than the title it is copying. X451's content will be close, but not exactly identical, to that of the original material. When confronted with those differences, test subjects will always prefer X451's version, either for 'being clearer' or 'more informative'.

X451's copied appearance is shared for every person in the room, and will only reset once no living being sees X451 directly. The manner through which X451 determines the presence of living beings is currently unknown. While X451 will visibly take damage in this form, it will still not be possible to separate any material from it. Furthermore, this damage is undone when X451 resets to its true form.

When studying X451, the reader will at first rapidly gain a basic understanding of the field covered by X451, but will rapidly develop a strong opinion about a controversy in this field. In some cases, the reader will express extreme views, and start showing signs of paranoia. In all cases, subjects will refuse to cooperate with individuals who do not share those views. Wether this is the objective or an unintended side-effect of the device is currently unknown.