ESOC, hear my plea.
- dietschlander
- Lancer
- Posts: 944
- Joined: Oct 8, 2015
- Location: Dietschland
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
right, so we need waters and tree roots and bushes combined.
Let's start irrigating by pumping large ammounts of seawaters through to be build 'waterstreets/channels'.
Is there a do-able way to get the salt out fast? How high above sealevel is the sahara?
Edit: we might need to dig large areas to and study which one to to start with to might be suiable for this potential upcoming project
Let's start irrigating by pumping large ammounts of seawaters through to be build 'waterstreets/channels'.
Is there a do-able way to get the salt out fast? How high above sealevel is the sahara?
Edit: we might need to dig large areas to and study which one to to start with to might be suiable for this potential upcoming project
Theres going to be a dam, the great dam and we'll let the beavers pay for it - Edeholland 2016
Anyway, nuancing isn't your forte, so I'll agree with you like I would with a 8 year old: violence is bad, don't do hard drugs and stay in school Benj98
Anyway, nuancing isn't your forte, so I'll agree with you like I would with a 8 year old: violence is bad, don't do hard drugs and stay in school Benj98
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 14364
- Joined: Mar 26, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
dietschlander wrote:right, so we need waters and tree roots and bushes combined.
Let's start irrigating by pumping large ammounts of seawaters through to be build 'waterstreets/channels'.
Is there a do-able way to get the salt out fast? How high above sealevel is the sahara?
Edit: we might need to dig large areas to and study which one to to start with to might be suiable for this potential upcoming project
Is it possible? It'd require modern engineering marvels of enormous scale and resources to bend Nature to human will. That is what discussion with lejend requires.
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
At least all this off topic stuff is helping in making the point clear.
- spanky4ever
- Gendarme
- Posts: 8390
- Joined: Apr 13, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
yeah, you are right on this one Jerom. If ppl still want to make shitposts, troll etc., when we are discussing an issue such as this one? I really cannot see any use in continuing to care, participate in discussions, or even bother to log in to the forum, exept for a random update, or to see what games are being streamed. Its really sad.
Hippocrits are the worst of animals. I love elifants.
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 14364
- Joined: Mar 26, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
momuuu wrote:At least all this off topic stuff is helping in making the point clear.
What's the ETA on the next shitting demon/apes story?
It's my favorite manga.
-
- Gendarme
- Posts: 5788
- Joined: Aug 20, 2015
- Location: USA
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
It is clear that off topic has declined, but only since basement posts have become less numerous.
A post not made is a post given away
A slushie a day keeps the refill thread at bay
Jackson Pollock was the best poster to ever to post on these forums
A slushie a day keeps the refill thread at bay
Jackson Pollock was the best poster to ever to post on these forums
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
For starters, itd be nice if mods contained shit like this somewhat
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Well, report the posts and action will be taken. Can't blame it all on the mods if we can't even bother to report.
Pay more attention to detail.
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 14364
- Joined: Mar 26, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
He said arguing with you was like planting crops in the Sahara.lejend wrote:Hey, umeo said that arguing constructively instead of shitposting is pointless like growing crops in the Sahara. We're just saying that that's actually very possible. It's perfectly on-topic.
I think I've done my part to foment activity on the forum. How about instead of complaining about it, we all do something about it, and be the change we want to see?
Everyone start one productive discussion today. Pick a topic. Guns, elections, sexbots, immigration, whatever. Then we can discuss it maturely.
Israel is the size of New Jersey nestled between two seas and has claim to a very large fresh water lake. The Sahara Desert is the size of China. It's lake:landmass ratio is smaller. Parts of Israel receive over 30 inches of rain a year while no part of the Sahara receives more than 4 inches of rain a year.
Whether it's truly possible or not is not the point, but rather the impracticality of it. It simply requires too much effort to point out the simplest of innacuracies in all your posts, only to be ignored or led onto some other inaccurate, falsified tangent, like we're doing now.
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 13004
- Joined: Apr 28, 2020
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
lejend wrote:Hey, umeo said that arguing constructively instead of shitposting is pointless like growing crops in the Sahara. We're just saying that that's actually very possible. It's perfectly on-topic.
I think I've done my part to foment activity on the forum. How about instead of complaining about it, we all do something about it, and be the change we want to see?
Everyone start one productive discussion today. Pick a topic. Guns, elections, sexbots, immigration, whatever.
proving once again that you can't read, I see!
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 13004
- Joined: Apr 28, 2020
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
deleted_user wrote:He said arguing with you was like planting crops in the Sahara.lejend wrote:Hey, umeo said that arguing constructively instead of shitposting is pointless like growing crops in the Sahara. We're just saying that that's actually very possible. It's perfectly on-topic.
I think I've done my part to foment activity on the forum. How about instead of complaining about it, we all do something about it, and be the change we want to see?
Everyone start one productive discussion today. Pick a topic. Guns, elections, sexbots, immigration, whatever. Then we can discuss it maturely.
Israel is the size of New Jersey nestled between two seas and has claim to a very large fresh water lake. The Sahara Desert is the size of China. It's lake:landmass ratio is smaller. Parts of Israel receive over 30 inches of rain a year while no part of the Sahara receives more than 4 inches of rain a year.
Whether it's truly possible or not is not the point, but rather the impracticality of it. It simply requires too much effort to point out the simplest of innacuracies in all your posts, only to be ignored or led onto some other inaccurate, falsified tangent, like we're doing now.
thank you Callen, I was contemplating if I was going to school them on the difference between Israel and the Sahara, but you solved that dilemma for me!
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
One of the largest sugar factories in the world is in Sahara, 4 hours drive south of El Khartoum.
[Sith] - Baphomet
- dietschlander
- Lancer
- Posts: 944
- Joined: Oct 8, 2015
- Location: Dietschland
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Back ontopic then: aren't we already able to generate and steer clouds? Kami is able to fly the plane to drop the stuff which steers he clouds.
Don't take Europas cloudse; build on open sea cloudplants. We must make the Sahara green!
Don't take Europas cloudse; build on open sea cloudplants. We must make the Sahara green!
Theres going to be a dam, the great dam and we'll let the beavers pay for it - Edeholland 2016
Anyway, nuancing isn't your forte, so I'll agree with you like I would with a 8 year old: violence is bad, don't do hard drugs and stay in school Benj98
Anyway, nuancing isn't your forte, so I'll agree with you like I would with a 8 year old: violence is bad, don't do hard drugs and stay in school Benj98
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 13004
- Joined: Apr 28, 2020
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Snuden wrote:One of the largest sugar factories in the world is in Sahara, 4 hours drive south of El Khartoum.
Do they plant the sugar cane there though?
-
- Jaeger
- Posts: 3107
- Joined: May 16, 2015
- ESO: Hyperactive Jam
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Yes they do!umeu wrote:Snuden wrote:One of the largest sugar factories in the world is in Sahara, 4 hours drive south of El Khartoum.
Do they plant the sugar cane there though?
"...the area of sugarcane is rising rapidly in response to growing demands for bioethanol and increased sugar demand for human consumption. Despite considerable diversity in production systems and contexts, sugarcane is a particularly “high impact” crop with significant positive and negative environmental and socio-economic impacts."
"...it is considered a critical region for continued expansion due to its high production potential, low cost and proximity to European markets (Tyler, 2008)."
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 14364
- Joined: Mar 26, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Jam wrote:Yes they do!umeu wrote:Snuden wrote:One of the largest sugar factories in the world is in Sahara, 4 hours drive south of El Khartoum.
Do they plant the sugar cane there though?
"...the area of sugarcane is rising rapidly in response to growing demands for bioethanol and increased sugar demand for human consumption. Despite considerable diversity in production systems and contexts, sugarcane is a particularly “high impact” crop with significant positive and negative environmental and socio-economic impacts."
"...it is considered a critical region for continued expansion due to its high production potential, low cost and proximity to European markets (Tyler, 2008)."
"Our analysis is focused on Sub-Saharan Africa"
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Yea, I just checked... Kenana Sugar is practically not even sub-sahara
[Sith] - Baphomet
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 14364
- Joined: Mar 26, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
"Kenana is situated near Rabak on the eastern bank of the White Nile"Snuden wrote:Yea, I just checked... Kenana Sugar is practically not even sub-sahara
You mean it's near a water source, the same water source which can mark the end of the Sahara Desert?
It's like they're growing crops in a fertile valley and not in some sandy wasteland?The desert comprises much of North Africa, excluding the fertile region on the Mediterranean Sea coast, the Atlas Mountains of the Maghreb, and the Nile Valley in Egypt and Sudan.
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
deleted_user wrote:"Kenana is situated near Rabak on the eastern bank of the White Nile"Snuden wrote:Yea, I just checked... Kenana Sugar is practically not even sub-sahara
You mean it's near a water source, the same water source which can mark the end of the Sahara Desert?It's like they're growing crops in a fertile valley and not in some sandy wasteland?The desert comprises much of North Africa, excluding the fertile region on the Mediterranean Sea coast, the Atlas Mountains of the Maghreb, and the Nile Valley in Egypt and Sudan.
As I wrote... Kenana sugar is not EVEN sub-sahara. When I wrote my post I was sure it was at least considered sub-sahara.
The Nile runs through Sahara though.
[Sith] - Baphomet
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 14364
- Joined: Mar 26, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Snuden wrote:deleted_user wrote:"Kenana is situated near Rabak on the eastern bank of the White Nile"Snuden wrote:Yea, I just checked... Kenana Sugar is practically not even sub-sahara
You mean it's near a water source, the same water source which can mark the end of the Sahara Desert?It's like they're growing crops in a fertile valley and not in some sandy wasteland?The desert comprises much of North Africa, excluding the fertile region on the Mediterranean Sea coast, the Atlas Mountains of the Maghreb, and the Nile Valley in Egypt and Sudan.
As I wrote... Kenana sugar is not EVEN sub-sahara. When I wrote my post I was sure it was at least considered sub-sahara.
The Nile runs through Sahara though.
So it's less sub-saharan, more extro-saharan, if we want to delve into greek affixes
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
I'm slightly confused now.
The discussion was about growing crops in Sahara, I falsely claimed that Kenana Sugar is located in Sahara. It is not. When I wrote my post I thought it was.
I then stated that it is not even located in what is called sub-sahara.
Finally I stated (as a response to you saying the Nile indicated the end of Sahara) that the Nile runs through "the real Sahara"
The discussion was about growing crops in Sahara, I falsely claimed that Kenana Sugar is located in Sahara. It is not. When I wrote my post I thought it was.
I then stated that it is not even located in what is called sub-sahara.
Finally I stated (as a response to you saying the Nile indicated the end of Sahara) that the Nile runs through "the real Sahara"
[Sith] - Baphomet
-
- Ninja
- Posts: 14364
- Joined: Mar 26, 2015
Re: ESOC, hear my plea.
Snuden wrote:Finally I stated (as a response to you saying the Nile indicated the end of Sahara) that the Nile runs through "the real Sahara"
This is actually a good question. Technically, based on rainfall, yes, the Nile runs through the Sahara Desert. However, with the marvel that is modern irrigation and the Nile flowing from South to North, strengthening as it enters the desert, the surrounding area has access to liquid water enough to surpass desert-defining annual precipitations. Can then the Nile be used as a sort of man-utilized, emergent boundary to the desert? At least on a commercial scale the answer appears to be "yes."
If yes, the area along the Nile is hardly "sub-saharn" as it exists on the same latitudinal plane(s) as the desert, not below it. A more accurate affix would be "extro," meaning "outside" (but not really, as it can also mean beyond) or perhaps "ir" as in "not" or maybe, most likely, "se" as in "se-saharn" as in "apart" (i.e. seclude, secede), as if man's use of irrigation has successful reclaimed the area from dry desert's grip. How poetic! Greed can bend even the most imposing of Natural parameters.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 6 guests