To: Red Badger
Geez, now where’d all that water go in Noah’s flood?
To: WKUHilltopper
You beat me to it.
I wonder if anything is living down there.
4 posted on
10/21/2022 9:10:04 AM PDT by
gitmo
(If your theology doesn't become your biography, what good is it?)
To: WKUHilltopper
Since there is such a vast amount of Ringwoodite in the transition layer, suspected of holding 5 to 6 times the amount of surface water on the Earth, the question becomes “Could there be an immense undersea rift, that caused a vast amount of cold water to descend to the transition layer, that in turn released both a huge amount of heat into the ocean and caused a lot of the Ringwoodite to give up its water?
The heat alone would create an unheard of amount of clouds in the atmosphere, that would rain torrentially continually, and just as fast, sea levels would rise to perhaps cover almost all of the land on Earth.
25 posted on
10/21/2022 10:35:32 AM PDT by
yefragetuwrabrumuy
("All he had was a handgun. Why did you think that was a threat?" --Rittenhouse Prosecutor)
To: WKUHilltopper
The thick minerals wadsleyite and ringwoodite can hold significant amounts of water (unlike olivine at lower depths), so much so that the transition zone could hypothetically absorb six times the quantity of water in our oceans. “So we knew that the boundary layer has an enormous capacity for storing water,” Brenker says. “However, we didn’t know whether it actually did so.” Drill down deep enough and the earth swallows all our water? Is this what happened to the water on Mars?
28 posted on
10/21/2022 10:45:08 AM PDT by
GOPJ
(Trillion dollar infrastructure bill - ONLY ONE NH HEATED SIDEWALK HAS BEEN COMPLETED...)
To: WKUHilltopper
Wonder where it went, and where it came from.
Open up the water from the depths, as is described in Genesis.
41 posted on
10/21/2022 3:30:42 PM PDT by
Glad2bnuts
("None of the people I know who didn't take take the Jab regrets their decision" ZERO)
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