California fires from space
Posted: 2003-10-28 12:13am
Here is some imagery I borrowed from the RaptureReady site. If it's been posted before....
well, here it is again:
![Image](http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20031026/capt.ny11310262336.california_wildfires_ny113.jpg)
well, here it is again:
![Image](http://us.news2.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/p/ap/20031026/capt.ny11310262336.california_wildfires_ny113.jpg)
Get your fill of sci-fi, science, and mockery of stupid ideas
http://stardestroyer.dyndns-home.com/
http://stardestroyer.dyndns-home.com/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=32850
No, sounds kinda cool to me. But we also live in wildfire zones, so maybe we should just knock on wood and hope the hotest October in recent memory does not bite us in the backside.Raxmei wrote:I know this is a bit insensitive, but does anyone think that the California Wildfires would be a good name for a sports team?
I heard most of the people who died, were ones that refused to evacuate till it was too late. Let's just hope it is all over sooner than later. All kidding aside about flaming grizzlies and such, this is not a good situation.neoolong wrote:Damn. It already killed some people and destroyed a bunch of homes.
Oh, oh! Band name!! I call band name!Raxmei wrote:I know this is a bit insensitive, but does anyone think that the California Wildfires would be a good name for a sports team?
California and New Mexico both.KhyronTheBackstabber wrote:Ya know, with all the forest fires California has, there should be a flammable warning sticker on it.
Actually we have road signs that say "Now Entering Hazardous Fire Area" in some parts as well as "Now Leaving Hazardous Fire Area"KhyronTheBackstabber wrote:Ya know, with all the forest fires California has, there should be a flammable warning sticker on it.
The fires are made worse cause so many people have moved into the more dangerous wild fire areas in the last 30 years.Asst. Asst. Lt. Cmdr. Smi wrote:We don't have to worry about wildfires in New Jersey, as over a third of the land is developed, and even if there is a forest fire, all the rain the state gets on a regualr basis will help put it out,
Well at least they wont be very dangerous once everything's been incinerated. Those areas where all probably desperately in need of controlled burns. Heck parks inside the city of Philadelphia need controlled burns; course that's the other side of the country but it shows how bad things can get.TrailerParkJawa wrote: The fires are made worse cause so many people have moved into the more dangerous wild fire areas in the last 30 years.
The Salton Sea in the Imperial Valley. The Valley was developed back in the 1920's, using the Colorado River as a water source, in the large version of the picture you can see it clearly. To supply water they knocked a hole in the bank of the river and put in a floodgate to feed a canal. However a huge flood washed away the gate and began flooding the valley, which is below sea level. The flood lasted for two years with the gap growing to several miles before a railway trestle was built across it and countless thousands of tons of rock dumped in. The result was a lake, which shrank considerably but has remained to this day, more recently its expanded at times, and it was named the Salton Sea though I dont know when or why.kojikun wrote:whats that nice green patch towards the bottom right?
Too much undergrowth is what made the Oakland Hills fire so bad. I remember the next day in class my geography teacher told us the same thing happened to the Oakland hills in the 20's or 30's. Nobody wanted to clear out the nice trees and brush next to their homes. So once a century everything now burns to the ground.Sea Skimmer wrote:Well at least they wont be very dangerous once everything's been incinerated. Those areas where all probably desperately in need of controlled burns. Heck parks inside the city of Philadelphia need controlled burns; course that's the other side of the country but it shows how bad things can get.TrailerParkJawa wrote: The fires are made worse cause so many people have moved into the more dangerous wild fire areas in the last 30 years.
From what I understand, It is a Salt Lake.Sea Skimmer wrote: more recently its expanded at times, and it was named the Salton Sea though I dont know when or why.
Sweet, a hover dam!!Sea Skimmer wrote:Among the results of that flood was the decision to dam the Colorado to control its seasonal floods, which lead to the Hover dam project.
They use the dams height above the river bed as floodgates. The varying height of the damn off the river floor allows them to reduce the height of the water while simultaneously raising the height required to spill over the top, thus providing an easy way to regulate lake capacity in times of inundation.Howedar wrote:But doesn't the water just flow underneath?
Assuming you mean the Hover dam, the concrete dam was built on the solid rock below the the river bottom and into the solid rock cliffs sides, its difficult for water to leak through that sort of thing..Howedar wrote:Sweet, a hover dam!!
But doesn't the water just flow underneath?
Assuming you mean the HOOVER Dam, then you'd be right.Sea Skimmer wrote:Assuming you mean the Hover dam, the concrete dam was built on the solid rock below the the river bottom and into the solid rock cliffs sides, its difficult for water to leak through that sort of thing..
Actually the name originally was Hoover Dam but it was then changed to Boulder, and then back to Hoover later as politics shifted about.kojikun wrote:
Assuming you mean the HOOVER Dam, then you'd be right.Useless knowledge: The Hoover Dam was originally named the Boulder Dam, because the nearest city is Boulder, Colorado, but the government changed its name in the 30s to the Hoover Dam, in honour of the president that pushed for the dams construction as an effort to provide jobs to depression-era unemployed.
No, it's nowhere near Boulder, Colorado (it's roughly 1000 km away). It was named the Boulder Dam because it's in Boulder Canyon. The nearest big city is Las Vegas, but it wasn't really a big city when construction began. In fact, much of Las Vegas' initial population settled there because of the construction of the dam.Butterbean569 wrote:Boulder is one of the closest cities? Although I moved from Colorado about 5 years ago and my memory might be a little off...I don't remember the dam being that close to Boulder lol Maybe back then Boulder was the closest "big" city or something