Scientists are generally the smartest people we've got, and they've made the world a much better place to live in. They've even come up with some clever, witty descriptions of nature's phenomena that has defied our ability to give it a name. "Milky Way" is probably the best, most whimsical description they've ever come up with, it's fun, it's easy, and it really does describe our galaxy in a way that people want, like to use and Big Bang is a great runner-up....But God's Bathtub.... I could come up with a myriad of reasons why it wouldn't be in the top 10,000 names to call this thing.
But for the most part, scientists are not inherently Shakespearean. These are the guys who come up with the latin-sourced, alien-sounding names, harder to read, let alone pronounce twenty-eight syllables long not unusual for a newly discovered dung beettle and a dental bill in there somewhere after having to pronounce the damn sucker.
As pristine as anything could be, whiter than any laundry detergent could whiten, making Clorox seem like a bottle of black dye, having people calling this newly, one of a kind discovery "God's Bathtub" is not only a pain in the neck but probably immoral and definitely bordering on blasphemy. It's neither cute, funny or infinitesimally entertaining.
Usually if something of scientific value is discovered, they name it after the discoverer. But "God's Bathtub", jeeez, sounds ike a bunch of scientists who didn't want the responsibility of naming it because they couldn't come up with something worth using as a name. They must have drawn lots or taken all the Scrabble letters thrown thm in the empty Scrabble box and continued on and on for months until "God's Bathtub" managed to spell itself into serendipitous destiny.
Hey, but the science regarding 'God's Bathtub' seems almost to make it all worthwhile,had me change my mind about posting an article with name like that.
I have just one request to Australian scientists at a loss to name some exotic, one of a kind natural phenomena.
Give it to a newspaper or local school and create a contest on what to call that belching tree that regurgitates green slime. Just don't let the scientists get anywhere near naming it.
....the same condition now as it was 7,500 years ago.
Understand your posting on the name etc but pure speculation on their part and although “some” scientist actually are smart, don’t forget the global warming idiots and there’s a ton of them.
The reason they could see all the way to the bottom of the lake is because it’s DEAD!
No fish, no seaweed, no bugs......nothing to disturb the water clarity at all............
“Beam me up Scotty.........it’s DEAD!”
God doesn’t bathe. He just sponges off.
Everyone hurry! Go on vacation there!
Geez....."remote"? It's a tourist destination near Brisbane.
The aboriginal name for Blue Lake is Karboora.
If the Aborigines know of it, it has been used.
“Imagine a lake that’s never been affected by climate change or any other man-made influences. Australian scientists say they have found just that”
Not for long huh.
When Twain wrote about lake Tahoe in in 1860’s, in his book
“Rouging It”, he asserts that he can see 900 ft. to the bottom and see the fish clearly.
To this day you can see more clearly into lake Tahoe. Look it up.
Yeah, sneak that in there, keep repeating it until people get used to it. They get used to it, they start to believe it.
"Never affected by climate change"? That part of Australia doesn't have seasons (spring, summer, winter, fall)? If so, the lake has been affected by (real) climate change.
Is there a ring around the tub? Or did God use special “environmentally friendly” soap? Gotta know these things.
And how do they know what water was like 7,500 years ago? Doesn’t any natural deep source spring water qualify as well? Or vapor distilled water?
All they found is a lake that some unwashed hippie hasn’t gone skinny-dipping in yet.
Just how do they know what the condition of the lake was 7,500 years ago...?
Did it not rain for 7,500 years over the lake...?
Blue Lake is a national park in Queensland (Australia), 44 km east of Brisbane on North Stradbroke Island. Access is provided by road 9 km west of Dunwich. The park's main features is Blue Lake which is known as a window lake and is just under 10 metres deep when full. The lake is a popular swimming attraction. It is home to the southern sun fish. Water from the lake overflows into the Eighteen Mile Swamp. link
Not as described in article.
How can that be when we've been told all our lives that things like DDT have contaminated every square inch of the planet?
It’s a trial balloon to see if there’s enough interest for the Hilton chain to eventually build a resort hotel there. /s
There was a factoid on Google Earth that in 1974 the lake was only 1.7 meters deep before it started filling.
Well, it’s better than Satan’s Toilet.