news:7ac69154.0402021005.21f20cd3@posting.google.com...
> "Uncle Davey" <noway@jose.com> wrote in message
news:<bvl7j3$dg4$0@pita.alt.net>...
> > > Warning: "Duncan Harris" is a hotmail account posting via Google, and
> > > you're on a thread in alt.fan.uncle-davey. The reference is possibly
> > > to J. Maynard Smith, E. Szathmary, The Major Transitions in Evolution
> > > (W. H. Freeman & Co, Oxford, 1995).
> >
> > If you're suggesting Duncan is a sock, then all I can tell you is, he's
not
> > one of mine.
>
> Where are the tttt's?
>
I had real trouble sending that one, I had to cut a bunch of groups as well
as change the header, but the text of tttt, out of my outbox, is below:
There's no extra > sign, so this is as sent:
start quote:
> Uncle Davey wrote:
> >>>>The amount of water in ice caps, glaciers and ground water is less
that
> >>>>3% of the total water on and in the earth. So these waters are
> >>>>insufficient to explain what happened to the flood waters.
> >>>>
> >>>>From http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/earthwherewater.html
> >>>>There is a total of about 326 million cubic miles of water in and on
the
> >>>>earth. 317,000,000 Cubic miles of this water is in oceans.
> >>>>
> >>>>oceans - 317,000,000 cubic miles
> >>>>glaciers and ice caps - 7,000,000 "
> >>>>groundwater - 2,000,000 "
> >>>>fresh water lakes - 30,000 "
> >>>>inland seas - 25,000 "
> >>>>soil moisture - 16,000 "
> >>>>atmosphere - 3,100 "
> >>>>rivers - 300 "
> >>>>
> >>>>So where did the water from the flood go?
> >>>>
> >>>>Richard McBane
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>I don't think they yet realise just how much subterranean water there
> >
> > is.
> >
> >>>That looks like a measurement of subterranean water accessible by dry
> >
> > land,
> >
> >>>rather than that groundwater which is underground and beneath the sea.
> >>>
> >>>I think once we get a little further with these neutrino telescopes,
> >
> > you'll
> >
> >>>find I'm right.
> >>>
> >>>One day, if the earth lasts long enough, we'll be drilling fresh water
> >
> > out
> >
> >>>from under the seas.
> >>>
> >>>Uncle Davey
> >>
> >>Water under the oceans is salty, not fresh. We have data from offshore
> >>oil drilling that confirms this. Along coastlines there is usually a
> >>considerable problem with salt water from the oceans intruding into
> >>fresh water aquifers. You don't have to go all that deep inland to
> >>encounter salt water. Fresh ground water is the result of recharge of
> >>aquifers by rainwater water from Noah's Flood.
> >
> >
> > Can I quote you on that?
> >
> No - It was an editing mistake. Suppose to say "Fresh ground water is
> the result of recharge of aquifers by rainwater water not from Noah's
> Flood." ^^^
> Thanks for pointing out my error.
I knew I couldn't believe my luck.
Uncle Davey
end quote.
Best
Uncle Davey
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