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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Doren who wrote (1400174)4/23/2023 3:48:59 PM
From: Wharf Rat2 Recommendations

Recommended By
Doren
pocotrader

  Respond to of 1578281
 
This was only temporary.

Hurricane Dorian satellite photos show Bahamas underwater (cnbc.com)



An image taken by satellite company ICEYE shows much of the Grand Bahama island was under water as Hurricane Dorian hit on Monday.



To: Doren who wrote (1400174)4/23/2023 10:45:53 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 1578281
 
Don't take my word for it. Rely on science and recent history:

Message 34257835
To: Wharf Rat who wrote (1398795)4/13/2023 2:57:04 PM
From: Broken_Clock of 1398828

Rat is befuddled that massive rains and flooding can happened in a State that is essentially a giant swamp.

"The common usage of this term implies that swampland is worthless. Without development or some ability to develop it, it is not valuable for real estate purposes. There have been cases that swampland was purchased and turned into very valuable property, notably for the creation of Walt Disney World and also to some extent including many developed lands in Florida. Sometimes that is done by businesses to meet a development permit requirement to preserve some Florida land in order to build on other Florida land. [5]


===
Message 34258004

To: Alex MG who wrote (22420)4/13/2023 4:44:22 PM
From: Broken_Clock of 22435
https://fdep.maps.arcgis.com/apps/MapSeries/index.html?appid=992bf1a70b734dbea8487aabb6ed5bee

you can duke t out with the geologists -g-

"Florida has unique origins. What would become the basement rocks of Florida were once part of other continents. During the early part of the Cenozoic Era, Florida was submerged under a warm, shallow, ocean which explains why our entire state has hundreds to thousands of feet of limestone beneath it! Land emerged from the ocean as sea level fell during the Oligocene Epoch. During the later part of the Cenozoic Era, quartz sand and clays were transported to Florida, via rivers and marine currents, from the Appalachian Mountain belt as it eroded over millions of years."
floridadep.gov