WineHippie Contributor
Number of posts : 4229 Age : 71 Location : being Humor : my sides hurt ... Registration date : 2009-01-23
| Subject: tropical storm alex - wind prediction map Tue Jun 29, 2010 7:15 am | |
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micjer Senior Member
Number of posts : 5325 Age : 63 Location : canada Registration date : 2009-01-23
| Subject: Re: tropical storm alex - wind prediction map Tue Jun 29, 2010 9:28 am | |
| Alex may miss the oil. Unfortunately there will be other hurricanes that won't. This is going to be a wild ride very shortly. http://www.naturalnews.com/029082_Gulf_Coast_oil_spill.htmlSo what happens when a Katrina-class hurricane comes along and picks up a few million gallons of oil, then drops that volatile liquid on a major U.S. city like Galveston or New Orleans? Now, before we pursue this line of thinking any further, let's dismiss the skeptics out there who think oil can't drop from the sky because oil doesn't evaporate. Actually, if you look at the history of hurricanes and storms, you'll find thousands of accounts of lots of things that don't evaporate nonetheless falling out of the sky. The phrase "raining cats and dogs" it's entirely metaphor, you know: There are documented accounts of all sorts of things raining down from the sky: Fish, frogs, large balls of ice, and so on. If rain storms can pick up fish out of the ocean, then drop them on land, then they certainly have the capacity to pick up oil, too. Besides, as any chemist will tell you, the various petrochemicals found in crude oil evaporate even without a storm picking them up! Oil, in other words, does evaporate into the air. Or, more accurately, some of the lighter chemicals in crude oil evaporate even at temperatures of around 100 degrees (F). Those are Gulf Coast temperatures. | |
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