JohnRM wrote:Um, perhaps, because it is STILL interesting.
Yeah.
JohnRM wrote:Um, perhaps, because it is STILL interesting.

They were simulating a real job?Scientists weenie 1st year grad students looking for funding at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory used supercomputers to simulate . . .

pstarr wrote:They were simulating a real job?Scientists weenie 1st year grad students looking for funding at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory used supercomputers to simulate . . .

dude, you knowingly posted this sh@t and should expect comments in kind. We have been through the abiotic issue endlessly here and it is no longer a curiosity. Even to mention it detracts from the gravitas of this forum and sheds ill wind upon our lofty endeavors.Carlhole wrote:pstarr wrote:They were simulating a real job?Scientists weenie 1st year grad students looking for funding at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory used supercomputers to simulate . . .
You don't have to demonstrate your childish frustrations over and over again. Everybody already knows your level of maturity, pstarr.

pstarr wrote:dude, you knowingly posted this sh@t and should expect comments in kind. We have been through the abiotic issue endlessly here and it is no longer a curiosity. Even to mention it detracts from the gravitas of this forum and sheds ill wind upon our lofty endeavors.Carlhole wrote:pstarr wrote:They were simulating a real job?Scientists weenie 1st year grad students looking for funding at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory used supercomputers to simulate . . .
You don't have to demonstrate your childish frustrations over and over again. Everybody already knows your level of maturity, pstarr.


Carlhole wrote:Oh, here we go with the knickers and the bunching...






steam_cannon wrote:Carlhole wrote:Oh, here we go with the knickers and the bunching...
I think you should have introduced the article by describing it correctly. Or perhaps you could have put in a joke, like "this will produce enough fuel for the abiotic posters to drive around the block once every thousand years... Lol".
Instead you've misrepresented a topic of research and started name calling. Though "incurious dumbass" is not very bad name calling, so I'll give you credit for that.







PrestonSturges wrote:Blocking sunlight is going to have a corresponding (?) decrease in crop yields, so cooling the world would deliberately starve hundreds of mostly poor millions.

EnergyUnlimited wrote:PrestonSturges wrote:Blocking sunlight is going to have a corresponding (?) decrease in crop yields, so cooling the world would deliberately starve hundreds of mostly poor millions.
We don't need to worry about that because projects aimed at this goal are in firm domain of Sci-Fi.
Your argument is also misplaced:
By not doing it we will starve several billions in due course due to farmland destruction, desertification etc.
However it is *impossible* to do it, so it will not be done.

Scientists at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory used supercomputers to simulate what would happen to carbon and hydrogen atoms buried 40 to 95 miles beneath the Earth’s crust, where they would be subjected to prodigious pressures and temperatures.

Says who ?
Pretty sure the pressure decreases as you go further into the Earth, that's why it's liquid rather than being "more" solid.
The pressure which creates volcanoes is lateral pressure of sliding plates.

Australia is considering awarding carbon credits for killing feral camels as a way to tackle climate change.
The suggestion is included in Canberra's "Carbon Farming Initiative", a consultation paper by the Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency, seen Thursday.
Adelaide-based Northwest Carbon, a commercial company, proposed culling some 1.2 million wild camels that roam the Outback, the legacy of herds introduced to help early settlers in the 19th century.
Considered a pest due to the damage they do to vegetation, a camel produces, on average, a methane equivalent to one tonne of carbon dioxide a year, making them collectively one of Australia's major emitters of greenhouse gases.
In its plan, Northwest said it would shoot them from helicopters or muster them and send them to an abattoir for either human or pet consumption.
"We're a nation of innovators and we find innovative solutions to our challenges -- this is just a classic example," Northwest Carbon managing director Tim Moore told Australian Associated Press.
The idea was among those accepted for discussion by the government, which is seeking to "provide new economic opportunities for farmers, forest growers and landholders" if they come up with ways to cut emissions, according to the document.
Heavily reliant on coal-fired power and mining exports, Australia is one of the world's worst per capita polluters and the government is looking at ways to clean up its act.
Legislation for the "Carbon Farming Initiative" is set to go before parliament next week.
http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.7a5f7af9f08212f6d2aaa2f75c515f65.6c1&show_article=1



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