Thursday, November 1, 2018

Muddy spring in southern California, at the end of the San Andreas Fault, suddenly begins migrating across the countryside.






5 comments:

  1. Should they call... http://media.cagle.com/83/2009/12/10/72191_600.jpg ?

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    1. Yep, he can produce a blast of hot air like nobody else! The only problem is, wherever he goes- cold weather, rain, snow & hail always follow. That's glowball warmening for you!

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  2. We used to have these in the FSU where I was working (some years ago), but their cause wasn't seismically-related. They were the underground blowouts from surrounding old gas wells that the Soviets had lost control of, and run away from. The natives called them 'Gryphons'. The wells were a kilometer or two away, old rigs still standing on them. Like this one, the gryphons would migrate and/or coalesce with each other. Big Mess.

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  3. "The carbon dioxide is probably being formed as a result of the geologic processes deep underneath this part of California. As thousands of years of loose sediment dumped by the Colorado River get pushed deeper underground, where there’s more pressure and heat, the material is getting cooked and transformed into sandstone or greenschist rock, which produces carbon dioxide, Hudnut said."

    So my SUV isn't the cause of global warming????
    Steve

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