Originally Posted by
Hotel Kilo
I recently went to visit Plymouth Rock. I have ancestors that came over on the Mayflower. It was a fun trip. I also noticed that the plymouth rock at high tide wasn't under water. Heck the water barely touches the base of it. So if there is a warming and melting of ice caps, shouldn't the sea also be rising? I read about this all the time yet here is this rock, circa like 1620 or so, and it's not underwater at high tide (it was a king tide too). The water barely touched the base of it. Locals said it's been like that for as long as they can remember for generations.
Look at areas prone to tidal flooding like Norfolk, South Florida.
Their tidal flooding has been getting worse, not better.
Originally Posted by
Tailhookah
Mostly true. But most of those “great” wind turbines froze up. In Texas! Can you believe it?
Those nat gas plants also went offline when it got excessively hot. It’s almost like we need a multi prong solution.
Originally Posted by
Tailhookah
Denmark-56% from wind.
And they’re doing fine, odd