| Topic: |
Science > Physics |
| User: |
"don findlay" |
| Date: |
07 Apr 2007 08:26:45 PM |
| Object: |
The picture that speaks a thousand words |
http://users.indigo.net.au/don/abstracts/convergence.html
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| User: "don findlay" |
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| Title: Re: The picture that speaks a thousand words |
09 Apr 2007 04:44:16 PM |
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malibu wrote:
On Apr 7, 10:36 pm, "don findlay" <d...@tower.net.au> wrote:
TheBookman wrote:
On Sat, 07 Apr 2007 20:11:53 -0600, Art Deco wrote:
don findlay <d...@tower.net.au> wrote:
http://users.indigo.net.au/don/abstracts/convergence.html
A thousand words of what?
Looks like "Crayola" is one of them.
Yep, ..Anything to make it easier for the cognitively challenged
around here. (You can't say I'm not good to them. )
Earth expansion is so self-evident that pictures
won't help. Their heads are in the sand, their eyes
are clogged with sand, they got sand for brains.
The Solomon Islands just rose 30 meters.
John
Mmm, ..no, ..the water went *out 70. Still.... Around the northwest
coast of Australia there are recent coral reefs about ten miles
inland, i.e., behind the mangroves, the salt, and the shelly flats,
and there are likewise recent uplifted similar reef formations off the
west coast. And Perth beaches here are made of shelly sandstones and
fossil mangroves (?) which have been similarly uplifted. And behind
that lot is the big normal Darling Fault, an exhumed transform fault
that puts the continental interior 1000m above the coastal plains, and
on that one there are lateritised Permian coral beds identical to
what's forming at the present day.
This flat crumpled uplift due to plate collision, it's everywhere,
everywhere. Anyone who doesn't believe in Plate Tectonics crumpling
the crust and uplifting it must be nuts.
http://users.indigo.net.au/don/ng/ning.html
....Teams of researchers have it all sussed - ...had it all sussed
years ago. They're still milking it.
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| User: "don findlay" |
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| Title: Re: The picture that speaks a thousand words |
09 Apr 2007 09:18:04 AM |
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malibu wrote:
On Apr 7, 10:36 pm, "don findlay" <d...@tower.net.au> wrote:
TheBookman wrote:
On Sat, 07 Apr 2007 20:11:53 -0600, Art Deco wrote:
don findlay <d...@tower.net.au> wrote:
http://users.indigo.net.au/don/abstracts/convergence.html
A thousand words of what?
Looks like "Crayola" is one of them.
Yep, ..Anything to make it easier for the cognitively challenged
around here. (You can't say I'm not good to them. )
Earth expansion is so self-evident that pictures
won't help. Their heads are in the sand, their eyes
are clogged with sand, they got sand for brains.
The Solomon Islands just rose 30 meters.
Yes, ..but that's cheating. You're not allowed to count that as
tectonic movement. All strong motions are ruled out of order. Only
the whispering creep of the tumbleweed at the ridges counts, ...you
know, ... a few centimetres a year. That's what they say about moving
plates isn't it, ..the whole plate moves.
Which is funny when you think about it, because in a year you'd hardly
get more than a few earthquakes at the ridge. So you'd have one going
off there, at one transform sector, ..boom! ..and another going off
here at another - Boom! And both of them together in their
respective sectors combine to move the whole plate.
I mean, ..are they nuts?
Anyway, ...this mob don't have the mental capacity to handle the
reality of what the Earth can dish up when it likes, making cities
fall down and washing villages high up into the mountains every so
often. They're quite happy with the cozy thought of a few millimetres
a year. A meteorite from space is ok, because anybody knows stuff
falling from the sky does in in a matter of seconds, ..it even gives
them a risky quiver, ..but the idea of the Earth doing anything
similar leaves them like stunned mullet - even though there are
pictures to show what can happen and common-or-garden insurance
companies are right in there, our professionals are not very good at
simple addition. They think if there is no proof of it happening in
the last ten GPS years then it can't possibily happen. I bet they
don't even say their prayers when they switch out the light at night.
They're really taking an awful risk, banking on meteorites for their
thrills.
http://users.indigo.net.au/don/ng/truck.html
http://tinyurl.com/nflew ]
John
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| User: "Sjouke Burry" |
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| Title: Re: The picture that speaks a thousand words |
10 Apr 2007 01:15:33 AM |
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malibu wrote:
On Apr 7, 10:36 pm, "don findlay" <d...@tower.net.au> wrote:
TheBookman wrote:
On Sat, 07 Apr 2007 20:11:53 -0600, Art Deco wrote:
don findlay <d...@tower.net.au> wrote:
http://users.indigo.net.au/don/abstracts/convergence.html
A thousand words of what?
Looks like "Crayola" is one of them.
Yep, ..Anything to make it easier for the cognitively challenged
around here. (You can't say I'm not good to them. )
Earth expansion is so self-evident that pictures
won't help. Their heads are in the sand, their eyes
are clogged with sand, they got sand for brains.
The Solomon Islands just rose 30 meters.
John
GEEK.....
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