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@mikeymk | 28 October 17 | |
The biggest bombs we have are nothing compared to volcanoes. But the planet needs life, and our biggest bombs do more damage in radioactive aftermath than they do for the blast itself. That affects all life.
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@obi_jon | 28 October 17 | |
@ jayna - 28.10.17 - 11:43am I watched a video on YouTube bout the destruction of the planet earth through nuclear bombing. Is this possible that our planet and all its habitants could be wiped out of this universe for ever. It's possible that some form of life could survive the radioactivity of a full scale nuclear war but it would set the planet back millions of years on an evolutionary scale. I doubt that any humans who managed to survive the initial exchange of missiles sheltered in deep underground nuclear bunkers would have much chance of continued long term survival with the entire surface of the planet irradiated. |
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@sisfreak2017 | 29 October 17 | |
@ jayna - 28.10.17 - 11:43am I watched a video on YouTube bout the destruction of the planet earth through nuclear bombing. Is this possible that our planet and all its habitants could be wiped out of this universe for ever. just 1 RS-28 can deliver upto 10Tonnes of Nuke bombs like a nuclear cluster bomb so as one country fires theirs nodoubt so does everyone else hence the logic of MAD ,big.boooms Everywhere, the planet's still going to be there just the living things will mostly die. . Maybe Would be a nice change |
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@bambi99 | 29 October 17 | |
@ sisfreak2017 - 28.10.17 - 02:42am jeez thinking about all that stuffs makes ones bonse hurt are we all and everything else that exists just a dream in somethings mind ??? , and where did that something come from. . And people's still believe in their fairytale madeup gods. This |
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@bambi99 | 29 October 17 | |
@ obi_jon - 28.10.17 - 03:00pm It's possible that some form of life could survive the radioactivity of a full scale nuclear war but it would set the planet back millions of years on an evolutionary scale. I doubt that any humans who managed to survive the initial exchange of missiles sheltered in deep underground nuclear bunkers would have much chance of continued long term survival with the entire surface of the planet irradiated. Isn't there a volcano in yellowstone park u.s.a could do the same |
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@obi_jon | 29 October 17 | |
Yellowstone is just one of the so called supervolcanoes, there are several others considered more dangerous. The materials released into the atmosphere by a supervolcano eruption would cause a similar climate catostrophe, lasting for several years or even decades but the area of devastation would be fairly localised around the eruption site, if Yellowstone erupted it would obliterate a large part of the United States immediately and blanket most of the rest in a layer of ash and debris at least a meter thick but the earth would recover eventually and the lack of radioactive contamination would greatly increase the longer term survival prospects in other parts of the world. Humankind could conceivably survive a supervolcano eruption but civilization as we know it would more than likely collapse.
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@shadow27 | 5 November 17 | |
High-energy particles from outer space have helped uncover an enigmatic void deep inside the Great Pyramid of Giza. Using high-tech devices typically reserved for particle physics experiments, researchers peered through the thick stone of the largest pyramid in Egypt for traces of cosmic rays and spotted a previously unknown empty space. The mysterious cavity is the first major structure discovered inside the roughly 4,500-year-old Great Pyramid since the 19th century, researchers report online November 2 in Nature. It's right above the Grand Gallery.. |
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@obi_jon | 5 November 17 | |
@ shadow27 - 5.11.17 - 05:48am High-energy particles from outer space have helped uncover an enigmatic void deep inside the Great Pyramid of Giza. Using high-tech devices typically reserved for particle physics experiments, researchers peered through the thick stone of the largest pyramid in Egypt for traces of cosmic rays and spotted a previously unknown empty space. The mysterious cavity is the first major structure discovered inside the roughly 4,500-year-old Great Pyramid since the 19th century, researchers report online November 2 in Nature. It's right above the Grand Gallery.. I read about this the other day. The particles they utilise are muons and the technique is called Muography. I'm fairly sure it's not the first structure they've found inside it since the 19th century though, I seem to remember they found another previously unknown feature a few years ago using other methods, possibly LIDAR but don't quote me on that. http://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-41845445 |
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@obi_jon | 5 November 17 | |
@obi_jon | 5 November 17 | |