At the most trivial level, look at wikipedia's article on diamond, the phase change diagram in particular. Diamond starts to be thermodynamically preferred over graphite at around 100k atmospheres, and has been known about for a century.
For a 2012 paper, there's this. Note that the first thing in the paper is the unquestioned statement "High pressure can fundamentally alter the bonding patterns of light elements and their compounds, leading to the unexpected formation of materials with unusual chemical and physical properties."
Here's a 2006 paper from Germany that directly looks at how high pressures affect the chemistry of alkalai metals, including sodium.
And a 1998 reference book containing five hundred pages of high pressure chemistry notes, including a handful of sodium compounds.
Seriously, nothing new here. Vastly overblown and irresponsible hype.
Thanks. I'm wondering now if there are no (more? diamonds are good for something) useful compounds to made under high pressure, or if it's just a matter more time being needed for research.
New Salt Compounds Challenge the Foundation of Chemistry
The title is overblown (it depends on what you think the foundation is), but get a load of this:
And here's the philosophical bit:
The obvious example of local truth is relativistic effects being pretty much invisible over the durations and distances that are normal for people, but there's also that the surface of the earth is near enough to flat for many human purposes.
Any suggestions for other truths which could turn out to be local?