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elenos
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Joined: 13-Jun-2007
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Topic: Megaflood 'made Island Britain' Posted: 19-Jul-2007 at 21:15 |
Great map, Dolphin, love it. In Australia the word "stoush" is an adjective and a verb. A lot of these great old words are dying now, unfortunately. During WWI the newspapers refered to the "The Great Stoush" and a battle was "a bit of the stoush". Yes, many Australian terms did originate from Ireland. But much traces back to the seventieth century.
The convict used what was called the "flash" language common among Londoners of the period which included rhyming slang. That gave a whole new flavor to the English language. To have a "butchers hook" was to go and take a look. "Me old china" could mean your wife, meaning dinner plate, meaning, oh never mind. It started off as a way of confusing authorities who always wanted to speak proper!
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elenos
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elenos
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Posted: 19-Jul-2007 at 22:04 |
Very good point, Red Clay. What Im saying is it would have
taken more that just a lake to make the English Channel a
permanent feature. The explanation given by the researcher for the event is
just not good enough to carry water so to speak. However the article you sent
gives example of believable causes. it is estimated from the annually-banded Greenland
ice-core that the annual-mean temperature increased by as much as 10C in 10
years. Great stuff, brief and to the point. As that same article says,. This
is a touchy subject that is currently the focus of much research.
Have you noticed how some, dont know who, dispute causes
for greenhouse affects? Cutting down carbons may prevent climate change in the
short term but not in the long term, for sudden climatic variation is a natural
feature of this earth. We dont have to worry about it for may take a lifetime,
but then, have you heard, beware of 2012!
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elenos
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DukeC
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Posted: 25-Jul-2007 at 01:24 |
Water has the potential to dramatically alter landforms, the Missoula Floods removed an estimated 50 cubic miles of land from eastern Washington state.
The peak flow of the largest floods is estimated to be 40 to 60 cubic kilometers per hour (9.5 to 15 cubic miles per hour).[1][2] The maximum flow speed approached 36 meters/second (80 miles per hour).[3] Up to 1.91019 joules of potential energy were released by each flood, the equivalent of 4500 megatons of TNT.[4] The cumulative effect of the floods was to excavate 210 km (50 mi) of loess, sediment and basalt from the channeled scablands of eastern Washington and to transport it downstream.[1] |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missoula_Floods
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elenos
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Posted: 25-Jul-2007 at 02:45 |
Yes, very good, but I have already answered a similar question. For all others wanting to ask the same question, yes I agree! Water from iceberg melt can change lands. But the original article doesn't say anything like that. As I have pointed twice now that original article needs more evidence ans is badly worded.
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elenos
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DukeC
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Posted: 25-Jul-2007 at 13:35 |
More specifically the water from melting icesheets that could be over a mile in thickness that often formed huge lakes behind icedams and other features. When these gave way incredible force was released, and the floods were often repeated.
The evidence the article cites is the water channels etched into the bottom of the English channel.
Edited by DukeC - 25-Jul-2007 at 14:39
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elenos
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Posted: 26-Jul-2007 at 00:57 |
I fould that interesting about the water channels, but again not enough information.
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elenos
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opuslola
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Posted: 15-Jan-2014 at 00:33 |
Dear
RedClay, would you like to reconsider your post here?
Ron
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red clay
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Posted: 15-Jan-2014 at 09:19 |
Why?
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"Arguing with someone who hates you or your ideas, is like playing chess with a pigeon. No matter what move you make, your opponent will walk all over the board and scramble the pieces".
Unknown.
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opuslola
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Posted: 15-Jan-2014 at 21:06 |
Well Red, it seems that during Ice Ages, there can be created vast lakes kept in bounds by Ice Dams, and to make the theory have some feet, maybe that is what caused the great fast flow of water?
I.e. the ice dam broke!
Regards, Ron
Edited by opuslola - 15-Jan-2014 at 21:06
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