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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin |
#2
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On Sat, 27 Sep 2014 21:10:25 -0500, Martin Eastburn
wrote: On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin I'll bet you'll enjoy it. Take a look at it on Amazon. -- Ed Huntress |
#3
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On 9/27/2014 9:10 PM, Martin Eastburn wrote:
On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin |
#4
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On Sun, 28 Sep 2014 21:35:40 -0500, Martin Eastburn
wrote: On 9/27/2014 9:10 PM, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. -- Ed Huntress |
#5
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On 9/28/2014 10:15 PM, Ed Huntress wrote:
On Sun, 28 Sep 2014 21:35:40 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/27/2014 9:10 PM, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. Have you heard - three volcanoes are blowing their tops - latest is Japan. Philippines and then Ice Land. North American, Pacific, mid Trench Atlantic. I can't wait for the three sisters in Oregon or some others in the region. Been a while since some of the dozen or so in the Pacific NW and the ones in Texas, 5 in Austin, TX, .... Been sleeping a long time now. Martin |
#6
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On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 22:28:57 -0500, Martin Eastburn
wrote: Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. Have you heard - three volcanoes are blowing their tops - latest is Japan. Philippines and then Ice Land. North American, Pacific, mid Trench Atlantic. They're trying to punish the Blievers for their total nonsense AGWK. I can't wait for the three sisters in Oregon or some others in the Oh, no no no no no no NO! Not local, thankyouverymuch. region. Been a while since some of the dozen or so in the Pacific NW and the ones in Texas, 5 in Austin, TX, .... Been sleeping a long time now. I had been working on Hamilton, just off San Vicente Blvd in BH, when the movie Volcano came out. What a trip, seeing lava run down the road I had been on the day before! I was very happy for it to have been only a movie, too. -- Give me the luxuries of life. I can live without the necessities. --anon |
#7
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On 9/29/2014 11:03 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 22:28:57 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. Have you heard - three volcanoes are blowing their tops - latest is Japan. Philippines and then Ice Land. North American, Pacific, mid Trench Atlantic. They're trying to punish the Blievers for their total nonsense AGWK. I can't wait for the three sisters in Oregon or some others in the Oh, no no no no no no NO! Not local, thankyouverymuch. region. Been a while since some of the dozen or so in the Pacific NW and the ones in Texas, 5 in Austin, TX, .... Been sleeping a long time now. I had been working on Hamilton, just off San Vicente Blvd in BH, when the movie Volcano came out. What a trip, seeing lava run down the road I had been on the day before! I was very happy for it to have been only a movie, too. -- Give me the luxuries of life. I can live without the necessities. --anon I used to do monthly air plane rides up the coast and visit customers in the R&D land. Nice to fly buy and see some of the big ones - I have some 'glass' from Mt. Lassen, a glassy volcano, vial of fluff from Mt. ST. Helen. I bet watching some of the places you have been in the movie was something. Lava is nasty stuff. Mud slide is nasty as well. Martin |
#8
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On Tue, 30 Sep 2014 22:04:57 -0500, Martin Eastburn
wrote: On 9/29/2014 11:03 PM, Larry Jaques wrote: On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 22:28:57 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. Have you heard - three volcanoes are blowing their tops - latest is Japan. Philippines and then Ice Land. North American, Pacific, mid Trench Atlantic. They're trying to punish the Blievers for their total nonsense AGWK. I can't wait for the three sisters in Oregon or some others in the Oh, no no no no no no NO! Not local, thankyouverymuch. region. Been a while since some of the dozen or so in the Pacific NW and the ones in Texas, 5 in Austin, TX, .... Been sleeping a long time now. I had been working on Hamilton, just off San Vicente Blvd in BH, when the movie Volcano came out. What a trip, seeing lava run down the road I had been on the day before! I was very happy for it to have been only a movie, too. -- Give me the luxuries of life. I can live without the necessities. --anon I used to do monthly air plane rides up the coast and visit customers in the R&D land. Nice to fly buy and see some of the big ones - I have some 'glass' from Mt. Lassen, a glassy volcano, vial of fluff from Mt. ST. Helen. I bet watching some of the places you have been in the movie was something. Lava is nasty stuff. Mud slide is nasty as well. I'm sure being mown down by a pyroclastic cloud would rate high on the Suckage List, too. -- Give me the luxuries of life. I can live without the necessities. --anon |
#9
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On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 22:28:57 -0500, Martin Eastburn
wrote: On 9/28/2014 10:15 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Sun, 28 Sep 2014 21:35:40 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/27/2014 9:10 PM, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. Have you heard - three volcanoes are blowing their tops - latest is Japan. Philippines and then Ice Land. North American, Pacific, mid Trench Atlantic. The Magma Gods are angry, for sure... I can't wait for the three sisters in Oregon or some others in the region. Been a while since some of the dozen or so in the Pacific NW and the ones in Texas, 5 in Austin, TX, .... Been sleeping a long time now. Martin That's some excitement I can do without. g I think the reason I find volcanoes exciting is that I've never actually seen one. It's like 20-foot white sharks. They both look so cool on TV or in the pages of National Geographic. -- Ed Huntress |
#10
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On Tue, 30 Sep 2014 00:45:02 -0400, Ed Huntress
wrote: On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 22:28:57 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/28/2014 10:15 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Sun, 28 Sep 2014 21:35:40 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/27/2014 9:10 PM, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. Have you heard - three volcanoes are blowing their tops - latest is Japan. Philippines and then Ice Land. North American, Pacific, mid Trench Atlantic. The Magma Gods are angry, for sure... I can't wait for the three sisters in Oregon or some others in the region. Been a while since some of the dozen or so in the Pacific NW and the ones in Texas, 5 in Austin, TX, .... Been sleeping a long time now. Martin That's some excitement I can do without. g I think the reason I find volcanoes exciting is that I've never actually seen one. It's like 20-foot white sharks. They both look so cool on TV or in the pages of National Geographic. I wonder how many years production of CO2 the volcanoes are spitting out. Global warming this year for sure. -- Cheers, John B. |
#11
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"John B. Slocomb" wrote in message
... I wonder how many years production of CO2 the volcanoes are spitting out. Global warming this year for sure. -- Cheers, John B. I wonder who will have to pay for it. http://www.vox.com/2014/9/25/6843673...-rise-30-years |
#12
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On 9/30/2014 6:20 AM, John B. Slocomb wrote:
On Tue, 30 Sep 2014 00:45:02 -0400, Ed Huntress wrote: On Mon, 29 Sep 2014 22:28:57 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/28/2014 10:15 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Sun, 28 Sep 2014 21:35:40 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/27/2014 9:10 PM, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 9:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 21:27:29 -0500, Martin Eastburn wrote: On 9/26/2014 1:31 PM, Ed Huntress wrote: On Fri, 26 Sep 2014 07:15:22 -0400, "Jim Wilkins" wrote: "Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... On Thu, 25 Sep 2014 22:15:02 -0400, Tom Gardner wrote: Science by consensus. The majority *IS* always right! When it comes to science, it's mostly true. And it's so seldom *not* true, that those rare cases become legends. -- Ed Huntress Then you must know the legend of geology, which was completely wrong by universal consensus until an untainted grad student "discovered" continental drift, which had been Alfred Wegener's theory that the scientific community shunned because the Nazis championed him as an example of Aryan superiority. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/history/wegener.html "Wegener's theory found more scattered support after his death, but the majority of geologists continued to believe in static continents and land bridges." I studied Earth Science in high school and could plainly see that the then-current theory of mountain formation was utter bull****, the weight of sediment in a deep ocean trench couldn't possibly have raised an adjacent ridge on land, but it was what all geologists who wanted a job had to pretend to believe. The history of Continental Drift is an excellent example of how political correctness can stifle an entire field of science. -jsw Oh, yeah, that was a big one -- one of the modern legends. For the non-scientist, it's discussed in a fascinating way, as part of a larger story about geology, in John McPhee's _Annals of the Former World_. I read his two earlier books, _In Suspect Terrain_ and _Basin and Range_, which have now been consolidated into _Annals_. Highly recommended. He has a unique skill to make geology interesting for the non-specialist. Interesting that was. I have a minor in Geology and fully believed in and sold on continental drift in 66. I had several good professors who were former oil explorers. I enjoy some of the science shows on how the N.E. was created or the mid west... I was a Gulf Coast / inland stratification 'student'. It went well with Physics and Math majors. Martin Then you'd probably enjoy _Annals of the Former World_. McPhee also happens to be one of the best non-fiction writers in the English language. And he's a good shad fisherman. g Thanks, always interested in various sciences. And enjoy a good Geology book. Martin Hardback should be here Tuesday. Martin I'll be interested to hear what you think of it. Have you heard - three volcanoes are blowing their tops - latest is Japan. Philippines and then Ice Land. North American, Pacific, mid Trench Atlantic. The Magma Gods are angry, for sure... I can't wait for the three sisters in Oregon or some others in the region. Been a while since some of the dozen or so in the Pacific NW and the ones in Texas, 5 in Austin, TX, .... Been sleeping a long time now. Martin That's some excitement I can do without. g I think the reason I find volcanoes exciting is that I've never actually seen one. It's like 20-foot white sharks. They both look so cool on TV or in the pages of National Geographic. I wonder how many years production of CO2 the volcanoes are spitting out. Global warming this year for sure. -- Cheers, John B. It will be a chilling effect - more rain (particles set out rain) and a haze will be cast world wide. Martin |
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