Water does flow away you know, and Houston got 1000 mm not 50 meters.
1000 mm. over a large area can equate to 50 metres in a confined area.
Water does flow away you know, and Houston got 1000 mm not 50 meters.
Back then probably 90% lived right on the beach and no one would know it was coming.But you are overdue for tsunami. Around 1700 a tsunami wiped out 90 - 95% of the island's population.
I am not a big fan of large bodies of water.
What I don't get is that, late last week, we in the Maritimes were all told that Houston might get 1000mm of rain. Did nobody in Houston hear those forecasts? Nobody thought that maybe they should drive their $80,000 pickups out of town, find a place that's a little more above sea level?
No, we'll just leave them all in the driveway, because Trump said we'll be fine.
Please provide a link for Trump's prophesy.
makes you think that was a literal comment.
Water does flow away you know, and Houston got 1000 mm not 50 meters.
1000 mm. over a large area can equate to 50 metres in a confined area.![]()
In other words you made it up just like Analfloss does.You're not very good at social conversation, are you? Obviously, you have some sort of brain injury that makes you think that was a literal comment.
You might want to get out of your mother's basement, and experience the real world, where people have a sense of humour. Or, better yet, just beat yourself with a 5 pound maul.
Google hurricane Rita, and cure your ignorance.
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In other words you made it up just like Analfloss does.
How does hurricane Rita have anything to do with people ignoring the forecasts last week for Harvey?
All that not arranging money for drainage.
1000 mm. over a large area can equate to 50 metres in a confined area.![]()
You are grasping at straws. Toronto is not located in the Grand Canyon.
You are grasping at straws. Toronto is not located in the Grand Canyon.
If you drained Lake Ontario, it would sure look like it's beside it.
Ontario is the 2nd deepest of the five lakes.Not quite deep enough. Ontario is one of the shallower of the Great Lakes and the drop would be gradual, not sudden.
Not quite deep enough. Ontario is one of the shallower of the Great Lakes and the drop would be gradual, not sudden.
Not quite deep enough. Ontario is one of the shallower of the Great Lakes and the drop would be gradual, not sudden.
It's a deep, cold lake. Erie is shallow. Ontario is abyssal and the sides are steep (I'm a sailor and I watch the depth sounders fall right off all of the time). It makes it a relatively safe lake to navigate, though as there are relatively fewer shoals and rocks to hit because of its steep sides. Georgian Bay, on the other hand ...
http://www.reddit.com/r/MapPorn/comments/5oi8ql/map_showing_the_depths_of_the_great_lakes_3300_x/
But you are overdue for tsunami. Around 1700 a tsunami wiped out 90 - 95% of the island's population.
I am not a big fan of large bodies of water.
Grand Canyon depth: 1857 meters
Lake Ontario depth: 244 meters
I don't think there is a real comparison.
It was the Great Lakes you were making the comparison with!