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To: Fred Nerks; Red Badger; All

I don’t know if you ever saw this particular article, but what the first picture shows looks pretty man made to me. Looking at the link you show, that area looks like it could have been dunes. However, if you look at the link below, and especially the first photo I am sticking with the man made hypothesis. What I really would like to see is some serious studies on the ground by someone who is willing to believe at least some of these could be man made. Also have you gone over the entire area on Google Earth both high and low viewing. I have moved along some of the channels for miles at a low altitude and see no indication that the area I was tracking had anything like sand dunes.

http://earthepochs.blogspot.com/2014/04/the-largest-man-made-system-on-earth.html


69 posted on 02/14/2020 10:30:02 PM PST by gleeaikin
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To: gleeaikin

The Largest Ancient Man Made Canal System on Earth
earthepochs.blogspot.co.uk | April 3, 2014 | johnmjensen jr

Posted onAM by Fred Nerks

https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3243255/posts?page=1


70 posted on 02/15/2020 6:11:22 AM PST by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum!)
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To: gleeaikin

https://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/images/51190/okavango-swamp-botswana

excerpt:

The dark-green forested floodplain is about 10 kilometers (6 miles) wide where it enters the view (image left). The Okavango then enters a rift basin, which allows the river to spread out and form the wetland. The width of the rift determines the dimensions of the delta—150 kilometers (90 miles) from the apex to the downstream margin (image right). The apex fault is difficult to discern, but two fault lines define the downstream margin; the faults appear as linear stream channels and vegetation patterns oriented at right angles to the southeast-trending channels at image center.

The channels carry sediment from the Okavango River that is deposited within the rift basin. Over time, a fan-shaped morphology of deposits has developed, leading to characterization of the wetland as the Okavango “delta.”

The greens of denser savanna vegetation in the north give way to browns of the open “thornscrub” savanna to the south, matching the precipitation patterns of higher rainfall in the north and less rainfall in central Botswana. More subtle distinctions also appear: the arms of the delta include tall, permanent riverine forest and seasonal forest (dark green), with grasses and other savanna vegetation (light green) on floodplains.

Linear dunes, built up by constant winds from the east during drier climates, appear as straight lines at image left. The dunes are 10 meters high, and their sands hold enough moisture for some trees to grow on them. Counter-intuitively, the low “streets” between the dunes are treeless because they are dominated by dense, dry white soils known as calcretes...


71 posted on 02/15/2020 6:15:57 AM PST by Fred Nerks (fair dinkum!)
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