Posted on 05/11/2019 10:00:14 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Somewhere on the other side of the universe there’s a lake with 96,000,000 white balls.
Hmm...where’s this reservoir again? Asking for a friend.
—
Sorry man, I called dibs first.
LOL
“that turns harmless bromide into carcinogenic bromate”
Where does the bromide in the water come from?
Bromides creates protein coupling thereby improving water quality.Depleting sunlight has a wide range of effects. Reducing algae is primary among them. Algae reduction increases nitrates and reduces nutrition for fish.
By increasing toxicity and reducing nutrition secondary pathogens proliferate. Biomass kills are the inevitable result.
Reducing surface exposure has the added effect of reducing CO2 / O2 exchange, creating a dead zone. In Gulf areas this is magnified by highly toxic red tide.
This is a perfect example of bureaucratic problem solving. By solving one problem their fix creates a dozen more, creating more opportunity for bureaucratic meddling.
I don’t know about the Albert hall,
but it would take 3,012 to fill the
Apollo theater in Harlem, assuming
two per patron.
Black plastic balls are known to the State of California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm.
Buttgiggity’s nipples just exploded.
is this a case of black supremacy? Black entitlement? Why no fuchsia?
The water isn't for fish, it's for drinking water. The algae reduction also means a reduction in the use of chlorine (for that matter, reduced sunlight means reduced chlorinie loss).
Carbon black is what the manufacturer uses.
It's in the water to start with, gets there from contact with various stone.
When will they name it Lake Kardashian? ;^)
They are black.
Black absorbs heat from sunlight.
They are cooking the surface of the water.
“Why Are 96,000,000 Black Balls on This Reservoir?”
Because having 96,000,000 White Balls would be racist?
Has anyone calculated how many degrees this surface raises the temp of the water?
Amusingly, according to the topic video linked above, blue was considered, meaning they could have wound up blue-balling the reservoir.
The Las Virgenes Municipal Water District dumped nearly 1 million plastic balls into its Calabasas recycled water reservoir. The 4-inch plastic balls cover the surface, helping to protect the water and prevent evaporation during the drought. Courtesy of LVMWD. | Shade balls dropped into water reservoir | Acorn Newspapers | Published on Aug 14, 2015
LVMWD’s Las Virgenes Reservoir
https://www.lvmwd.com/education/the-journey-your-water-takes/lvmwd-s-las-virgenes-reservoir
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