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80-year-old weightlifter is busted for doping

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The latest target on the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency's list: an An 80-year-old weightlifter who was busted for steroids.
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HeyNix
3893 days ago
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Drain the Oceans

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Drain the Oceans

How quickly would the ocean's drain if a circular portal 10 meters in radius leading into space was created at the bottom of Challenger Deep, the deepest spot in the ocean? How would the Earth change as the water is being drained?

–Ted M.

I want to get one thing out of the way first:

According to my rough calculations, if an aircraft carrier sank and got stuck against the drain, the pressure would easily be enough to fold it up[1] and suck it through. Cooool.

Just how far away is this portal? If we put it near the Earth, the ocean would just fall back down into the atmosphere. As it fell, it would heat up and turn to steam, which would condense and fall right back into the ocean as rain. The energy input into the atmosphere alone would also wreak all kinds of havoc with our climate, to say nothing of the huge clouds of high-altitude steam.

So let's put the ocean-dumping portal far away—say, on Mars. (In fact, I vote we put it directly above the Curiosity rover; that way, it will finally have incontrovertible evidence of liquid water on Mars's surface.)

What happens to the Earth?

Not much. It would actually take hundreds of thousands of years for the ocean to drain.

Even though the opening is wider than a basketball court, and the water is forced through at incredible speeds,[2] the oceans are huge. When you started, the water level would drop by less than a centimeter per day.

There wouldn't even be a cool whirlpool at the surface—the opening is too small and the ocean is too deep.[3] (It's the same reason you don't get a whirlpool in the bathtub until the water is more than halfway drained.)

But let's suppose we speed up the draining by opening more drains. (Remember to clean the whale filter every few days), so the water level starts to drop more quickly.

Let's take a look at how the map would change.

Here's how it looks at the start:

And here's the map after the oceans drop 50 meters:

It's pretty similar, but there are a few small changes. Sri Lanka, New Guinea, Great Britain, Java, and Borneo are now connected to their neighbors.

And after 2000 years of trying to hold back the sea, the Netherlands are finally high and dry. No longer living with the constant threat of a cataclysmic flood, they're free to turn their energies toward outward expansion. They immediately spread out and claim the newly-exposed land.

When the sea level reaches (minus) 100 meters, a huge new island off the coast of Nova Scotia is exposed—the former site of the Grand Banks.

You may start to notice something odd: Not all the seas are shrinking. The Black Sea, for example, shrinks only a little, then stops.

This is because these bodies are no longer connected to the ocean. As the water level falls, some basins cut off from the drain in the Pacific. Depending on the details of the sea floor, the flow of water out of the basin might carve a deeper channel, allowing it to continue to flow out. But most of them will eventually become landlocked and stop draining.

At 200 meters, the map is starting to look weird. New islands are appearing. Indonesia is a big blob. The Netherlands now control much of Europe.

Japan is now an isthmus connecting the Korean peninsula with Russia. New Zealand gains new islands. The Netherlands expand north.

New Zealand grows dramatically. The Arctic Ocean is cut off and its the water level stops falling. The Netherlands cross the new land bridge into North America.

The sea has dropped by two kilometers. New islands are popping up left and right. The Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico are losing their connections with the Atlantic. I don't even know what New Zealand is doing.

At three kilometers, many of the peaks of the mid-ocean ridge—the world's longest mountain range—break the surface. Vast swaths of rugged new land emerge.

By this point, most of the major oceans have become disconnected and stopped draining. The exact locations and sizes of the various inland seas are hard to predict; this is only a rough estimate.

This is what the map looks like when the drain finally empties. There's a surprising amount of water left, although much of it consists of very shallow seas, with a few trenches where the water is as deep as four or five kilometers.

Vacuuming up half the oceans would massively alter the climate and ecosystems in ways that are hard to predict. At the very least, it would almost certainly involve a collapse of the biosphere and mass extinctions at every level.

But it's possible—if unlikely—that humans could manage to survive. If we did, we'd have this to look forward to:

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HeyNix
3946 days ago
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Being from The Netherlands this made me chuckle
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9 public comments
internetionals
3940 days ago
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Go us!
Netherlands
jhamill
3944 days ago
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"I don't even know what New Zealand is doing".
California
Michdevilish
3945 days ago
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say cheese!
Canada
nathant
3946 days ago
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Go Netherlands!
NielsRak
3946 days ago
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Go the Dutch!
shhQuiet
3946 days ago
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How the Netherlands could rule the world
rclatterbuck
3946 days ago
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JD warned us. But did we listen? No, and to our cost.
ksteimle
3946 days ago
Bwahahaha! I am really sad, however, that he did not illustrate the whale filter.
gudjkrist
3946 days ago
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"The Netherlands cross the new land bridge into North America."

Feels like a funnier version of Risk.
Iceland

Pastime

8 Comments and 41 Shares
Good thing we're too smart to spend all day being uselessly frustrated with ourselves. I mean, that'd be a hell of a waste, right?
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HeyNix
3978 days ago
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8 public comments
AndyG1128
3978 days ago
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Me neither
Nashville, TN
sleepwalker
3977 days ago
Likewise.
smarkwell
3978 days ago
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Touche
rgsunico
3978 days ago
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Zing!
jonjonnyp
3978 days ago
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basically.
Atlanta, Georgia
adamgurri
3978 days ago
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welp
New York, NY
bronzehedwick
3978 days ago
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Man that's good.
Tarrytown, NY
JayM
3978 days ago
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Ha!
Atlanta, GA

A small victory for open access: Crowdfunded public stenographers will transcribe Bradley Manning trial

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Over the past month, Freedom of the Press Foundation (I'm on the board) has been crowdfunding money to hire a professional stenographer to provide daily transcripts of the court martial of accused WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning. His court martial started this week and will be very important for the future of journalism, whistleblowers’ rights and government secrecy—yet, paradoxically, the government refuses to provide public transcripts of the proceedings. Trevor Timm and Rainey Reitman from Freedom of the Press Foundation write:

Earlier today, we scored victory for transparency: the military judge, Col. Denise Lind, and the lead prosecutor in the case against Manning indicated that neither was likely to object to our publicly-funded court reporters using stenography equipment in the media operations center.

The issue came up early on the first day of the trial, when Judge Lind was questioning whether press and public access to the trial had been hampered. She specifically brought up the issue of a stenographer sitting in the media room. The prosecution did not object to a stenographer providing transcripts of the trial provided there was no actual audio or video recording made of the proceedings.

Essentially, this means that our stenographers can do their jobs without running afoul of a misguided and overly aggressive interpretation of the media restrictions on the trial.

Read more: Despite Government Obstacles, Publicly-Funded Stenographers Will Transcribe the Bradley Manning Trial. [Freedom of the Press Foundation]

    


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HeyNix
3981 days ago
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