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To: Eric N who wrote (8150)12/8/1997 12:48:00 AM
From: Jack Kanak  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 13091
 
<< winds
which sweep away top water layer during storms.
Eric N.>>>>

Eric, from the "content" we had on this thread last week, thank goodness
there has been a return to relevance and new information about related
things happening in the world.

Please elaborate, if you would, on the processes and effects involved
in the winds sweeping away "top water layer during storms", with reference to definitions of p/e's and what constitututes "top water".
If you say the phenomenon regarding the Black Sea has the length of history cited, then is
this process causing problems elsewhere in the world. If not, why not? Fascinating.!

You don't get this in the broker's office!!! Sorry, John Starks.

Jack Kanak



To: Eric N who wrote (8150)12/8/1997 7:15:00 AM
From: Charles A. King  Respond to of 13091
 
The problem exits because the Black Sea has only one opening through the Bosporus and Dardenelles which allows the water to escape. The water flowing into the Sea comes from rivers from all sides carrying dead tree trunks and other material, much of it organic, that settles to the bottom. The Black Sea is as deep as 6600 feet. As the organic material, made of hydrocarbons, settles to the bottom it is covered with silt also washed down from the rivers. Give it few hundred million years and wah lah you've got oil.

Booming economic activity by millions of people with no regard for controlling waste speeds up the generation of hydrocarbon input and the dead zone expands.

The main generator of currents in the Sea must be the wind, which will push the top layer aside and bringing up the putrid underlayers. I would think that could cause a culture among a vigorous people that would tend to promote the cleaning up of organic waste, regardless of whether they could do anything about the gigantic Black Sea or not.

Charles