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To: TigerLikesRooster; nuconvert
I watched a documentary on the Shoemaker-Levy-9 impact on Jupiter that occured in 1994 (I believe it was 1994), and it was really interesting. They said that the energy expended was equivalent to a Hiroshima-sized detonation, every second, for 13 years. And that the dust could caused by the impacts were greater than the size of the Earth.

Now, if the dust cloud can be that large, then it can be assumed that a huge meteorite hit (not necessarily something as big as the ShoemakerLevy9 comet that impacted Jupiter) could be counted on raising a sizeable dust cloud that would change life as we know it.

In the late 1800s there was a volcano explosion (with time i will recall the name of the mount) that caused parts of Europe and the US to experience a whole year without summer (due to the volcanic ash changing the climate patterns for the year). Imagine what an asteroid/meteorite/(God-forbid)Comet could do!

4 posted on 06/01/2004 1:12:31 AM PDT by spetznaz (Nuclear missiles: The ultimate Phallic symbol.)
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To: spetznaz

The astoroid was sent here by Halliburton, which is secretly run by a small but greedy race of space aliens who later returned to drill the oil the dinosaurs produced.

On a slightly more serious note:

Burning soft coal could stem global warming, I suspect, if things actually did get out of hand. Actually, though, I think third world countries already are burning a lot of soft coal.


5 posted on 06/01/2004 1:24:28 AM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Profile updated Friday)
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To: spetznaz
Re #4

Hi, spetz. That mountain is Krakatoa, which blew up in 1883. Here are some details picked up from Internet.

Krakatau erupted in 1883, in one of the largest eruptions in recent time. Krakatau is an island volcano along the Indonesian arc, between the much larger islands of Sumatra and Java (each of which has many volcanoes also along the arc). There is a very fine book about the Krakatau eruption by Tom Simkin and Richard Fiske, so if you really want to know about the eruption you should go to the nearest bookstore or library to find that. Here are some highlights from their summary of effects:

1. The explosions were heard on Rodriguez Island, 4653 km distant across the Indian Ocean, and over 1/13th of the earth's surface.

2. Ash fell on Singapore 840 km to the N, Cocos (Keeling) Island 1155 km to the SW, and ships as far as 6076 km WNW. Darkness covered the Sunda Straits from 11 a.m. Ont 27th until dawn the next day.

3. Giant waves reached heights of 40 m above sea level, devastating everything in their path and hurling ashore coral blocks weighing as much as 600 tons.

4. At least 36,417 people were killed, most by the giant sea waves, and 165 coastal villages were destroyed.

5. When the eruption ended only 1/3 of Krakatau, formerly 5x9 km, remained above sea level, and new islands of steaming pumice and ash lay to the north where the sea had been 36 m deep.

6. Every recording barograph in the world documented the passage of the airwave, some as many as 7 times as the wave bounced back and forth between the eruption site and its antipodes for 5 days after the explosion.

7. Tide gauges also recorded the sea wave's passage far from Krakatau. The wave "reached Aden in 12 hours, a distance of 3800 nautical miles, usually traversed by a good steamer in 12 days".

8. Blue and green suns were observed as fine ash and aerosol, erupted perhaps 50 km into the stratosphere, circled the equator in 13 days.

9. Three months after the eruption these products had spread to higher latitudes causing such vivid red sunset afterglows that fire engines were called out in New York, Poughkeepsie, and New Haven to quench the apparent conflagration. Unusual sunsets continued for 3 years.

10. Rafts of floating pumice-locally thick enough to support men, trees, and no doubt other biological passengers-crossed the Indian Ocean in 10 months. Others reached Melanesia, and were still afloat two years after the eruption.

11. The volcanic dust veil that created such spectacular atmospheric effects also acted as a solar radiation filter, lowering global temperatures as much as 1.2 degree C in the year after the eruption. Temperatures did not return to normal until 1888.

6 posted on 06/01/2004 1:24:45 AM PDT by TigerLikesRooster
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To: spetznaz

Krakatoa.

But I think early 1800's.


17 posted on 06/01/2004 8:25:40 AM PDT by BartMan1
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