Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- From: Timberwoof <timberwoof.spam@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 27 Apr 2007 00:38:04 -0700
In article <HfeYh.524$C35.386@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
"George" <george@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Every year nearly 40,000 tons of microscopic particles from asteroid
collisions or passing comets rain down on the Earth. Much of this
extraterrestrial debris is vaporized or melted in the atmosphere. Only a
tiny amount of dust - mainly particles no bigger than the width of a human
hair-- survives entry, much of it settling to the bottom of oceans and
lakes or is trapped in ice. If there were significant amounts contributing
to the huge volume of the earth, we'd see substantially larger amounts of
it in the Antarctic ice cores than we actually find.
Where does the vaporised dust go?
--
Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com> http://www.timberwoof.com
Level 1 Linux technical support: Read The Fscking Manual!
Level 2 Linux technical support: Write The Fscking Code Yourself!
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- From: Sjouke Burry
- Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- From: George
- Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- References:
- Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- From: George
- Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- From: Wiley Coyote
- Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- From: George
- Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- Prev by Date: Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- Next by Date: Re: And now for a different explanation for expansion
- Previous by thread: Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- Next by thread: Re: Question, what do things do when they freeze?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|