A collection of photos, documents, or music related to a specific project or person.

Inside wasn't gold or secrets, but a simple hand-held recorder with a note: "The trees are still broadcasting. Are you still listening?"

: Inside were thousands of tiny audio clips. They weren't just static. They were conversations—not of people, but of the environment. The sound of the wind through Royal Poinciana trees, pitch-shifted until it sounded like human humming.

: When Elias mapped the timestamps of the recordings, he realized they formed a perfect geometric grid over the town of Poinciana. Each recording was a "node."

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The file is not a known historical document, famous digital artifact, or a recognized piece of internet lore. Because the name is so specific—combining a real person (Scott Hamilton), a tropical tree (Poinciana), and a compressed file format (.zip)—it likely refers to one of three things:

A fictional file name used in a "lost media" or internet horror story.