Kinda obscure
Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2007 8:51 pm
What ship?


ORIGINAL: ilovestrategy
Ok, I'm gonna ask a really dumb question so no throwing tomatoes please! [:D]
Isn't the tower supposed to be on the other side?
ORIGINAL: m10bob
To this day there are countless Grumman F4's and F6's on the floor of Lake Michigan.
BTW, did you know the Great Lakes are not only NOT lakes, they are the worlds largest inland seas?
ORIGINAL: String
ORIGINAL: m10bob
To this day there are countless Grumman F4's and F6's on the floor of Lake Michigan.
BTW, did you know the Great Lakes are not only NOT lakes, they are the worlds largest inland seas?
And by what definition is that? I thought they were freshwater.
Oh and the worlds largest inland sea is the Caspian sea [;)]
ORIGINAL: m10bob
The Great Lakes contain the largest supply of fresh water on earth
ORIGINAL: Andrew Brown
ORIGINAL: m10bob
The Great Lakes contain the largest supply of fresh water on earth
I thought the largest supply was in Lake Baikal in Russia.
ORIGINAL: rtrapasso
ORIGINAL: Andrew Brown
ORIGINAL: m10bob
The Great Lakes contain the largest supply of fresh water on earth
I thought the largest supply was in Lake Baikal in Russia.
That's the most in a SINGLE lake... there are 5 Great Lakes.
Baikal has about as much as all the Great Lakes put together normally, but i understand it is greatly shrunken through various water projects of the government(s) (Soviet, Russia).
ORIGINAL: String
ORIGINAL: rtrapasso
ORIGINAL: Andrew Brown
I thought the largest supply was in Lake Baikal in Russia.
That's the most in a SINGLE lake... there are 5 Great Lakes.
Baikal has about as much as all the Great Lakes put together normally, but i understand it is greatly shrunken through various water projects of the government(s) (Soviet, Russia).
You are thinking the Aral sea which has basically dissapeared by now. The Baikal is quite fine and its waterlevel is the same as it was when it was discovered. There are some problems with industrial pollution though. There's a wood pulp factory on its shore.
ORIGINAL: witpqs
I forget the same at the moment - there is a huge lake in Africa that is way down. It turns out that it has completely dried up two (or perhaps three) times since the last ice age ended. Some of these things have been happening in cycles.