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Wondrous things and places thread.

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  • DungeonnoobDungeonnoob Member Posts: 315
    edited January 2014
    Yes sir! That Majoris was mind-blowing,and the music was marvelous.
  • DungeonnoobDungeonnoob Member Posts: 315
    Cant believe they hammered the mountain without any metal tools or they were just insanely lucky with the location (spoiler starts about about 5 mins in)
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-UoAIZe6ds&list=PL2809B93CAB2C6E96
  • DungeonnoobDungeonnoob Member Posts: 315
    edited August 2014
    Deleted!
    Post edited by Dungeonnoob on
  • DungeonnoobDungeonnoob Member Posts: 315
    Oak island,they might recover the treasure this year if it gets official.They believe the treasure from a holy jewish temple brought here by Templars,Freemasons and Rosenkrauters even Shakespeare is involved I'm exited.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQKNa45IUqg
  • DungeonnoobDungeonnoob Member Posts: 315
    edited April 2014

    Oak island,they might recover the treasure this year if it gets official.They believe the treasure from a holy jewish temple brought here by Templars,Freemasons and Rosenkrauters even Shakespeare is involved I'm exited.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQKNa45IUqg

    Updated!http://tv.nrk.no/program/koid75005414/shakespeare-oeyas-hemmelighet

    If the link do not work work,i can tell you this: Their detectors has struck gold,but there is something radioactive with it that disrupt all kinds of new technologic gear.A coded text from a church (Trinity church iirc) says that the Menora,art of shakespear and the 3000 year old ark lays there together.Mindblowing stuff!
    Post edited by Dungeonnoob on
  • DungeonnoobDungeonnoob Member Posts: 315
    Big bang simulation on supercomputers.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NjSFR40SY58
  • meaglothmeagloth Member Posts: 3,806

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rOlIJRQGNk4
    My first thoughts was..is it a impact/outburst/cave in???,but then it hits me..it has to be giant Ankeggs..um where did i put my acid resist amy,Yikes!This was recently in Sibiria Russia Yamal island.

    This looks like a pond(or large puddle), not a hole. Do you have other sources mentioning it's existence?
  • AdamsandlerAdamsandler Member Posts: 1
    edited June 2016
    I think you must visit Lake Tahoe. My friend goes to this place every year.
    Post edited by JuliusBorisov on
  • BillyYankBillyYank Member Posts: 2,768
    edited June 2016

    I think you must visit Lake Tahoe. My friend goes to this place every year.

    Wonder and awe brought down by crass commercialism. There's a metaphor here, I'm sure of it.
  • JuliusBorisovJuliusBorisov Member, Administrator, Moderator, Developer Posts: 22,725
    Unsolicited advertising of products or services are against the site rules, so I deleted the links and edited the comment. But I still left the comment about Lake Tahoe - it indeed looks an interesting place to visit.
  • OlvynChuruOlvynChuru Member Posts: 3,075
    Wondrous things:

    Fluorine! This chemical can set pretty much anything it touches on fire, even water! Yes, it's possible to set water on fire!

    Hassium! This is one of those extremely unstable elements that don't occur in nature and have only been created by humans. If the predictions of its density are correct, then it is the densest known substance, with a density of 41 grams per cubic centimeter. That's much heavier than it sounds; it means that a cubic meter of it would have a mass of around 41000 kilograms (90400 pounds)! That's more than the combined weight of six African elephants! It's too bad that hassium is so radioactive; it would be cool to lift a small cube of hassium and feel how heavy it is.
  • DungeonnoobDungeonnoob Member Posts: 315

    Wondrous things:

    Fluorine! This chemical can set pretty much anything it touches on fire, even water! Yes, it's possible to set water on fire!

    Hassium! This is one of those extremely unstable elements that don't occur in nature and have only been created by humans. If the predictions of its density are correct, then it is the densest known substance, with a density of 41 grams per cubic centimeter. That's much heavier than it sounds; it means that a cubic meter of it would have a mass of around 41000 kilograms (90400 pounds)! That's more than the combined weight of six African elephants! It's too bad that hassium is so radioactive; it would be cool to lift a small cube of hassium and feel how heavy it is.

    Sounds like wildfire from GoT.
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