![]() |
So were goin' to sink? Lol. Interesting. I know that some of the little islands in the Pacific are on the verge of sinking, like the island of Niue. They are pretty much resting on small volcanic crates.
|
Nigeria
|
england?
|
Northern California. Im pretty sure we're due for a devastating earthquake
|
Quote:
lol fuck yes. this is the chyeahh that kept me coming back to text boards long enough to inevitably text again. tell 'em. |
Manhattan
|
Florence, Kentucky
|
Sydney australia
Aside from the flooding, bush fires and dingos eating babies... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
on a side note, you guys are still reeling from the effects of the fallout from Fukushima. Infant/birth mortality rate is staggering along the westcoast. There should be all types of news coverage on this |
Ireland?
|
@ witty, these were in response to Orc's Ireland inquiry:
from what I've read, you guys are in the clear for major seismic activity. You've got a few mountain puffers here n there on your side of things but nothing I would worry about. Fact is you guys are relatively safe from inundation given the current sea level numbers and from what I can tell, should remain pretty intact given a pole revearsal though that is highly speculative. I did forget to account for rainfall there Orc. Heavy to major rainfall has been speculated to be a major precursor or direct contributor to seismic activity (limited to areas known for seismic activity/ fault regions), not to mention soil saturation that can lead to sinkholes, in worst case scenarios coastal erosion and another natural process where the land liquifies, known as liquifaction which we saw alot of it during the New Christchurch flooding and the Japan Quake back in 2011. Your local salt deposits would have much to disclose about how your land would handle all of this. I'm still interested in founding out about your salt mines/deposits |
Quote:
Also, I would help with our salt mine information, but I have no idea what you are talking about :( |
http://www.dcenr.gov.ie/NR/rdonlyres...alDeposits.pdf
http://www.dcenr.gov.ie/NR/rdonlyres...Top55_2005.pdf there we go, mineral deposits map. Looks like there is a mine in Kilroot. Thats the only one listed, not to say that there aren't undiscovered mines there. Doesn't account for natural salt water. Here is another useful link on the world wide scale http://www.k-plus-s.com/en/wissen/ro...vorkommen.html |
that k-plus link can give you some idea about the salt deposits here in the U.S. Now if you notice the spots in between the rock salt deposit blotches in the midwest from the gulf coast up till the Great Lakes, that is the New Madrid lies, and two of our biggest rivers are, the Mississippii and the Missouri. You overlay any of those future of the world maps and you can see the correlations between where the potash deposits/mines and rock salt deposit/mines are. That is a heavy indication of inner coastal land erosion. Thats some scary shit right there
|
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:53 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
User Alert System provided by
Advanced User Tagging (Lite) -
vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.