DeepSpaceNebulae
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_je4qe3m wrote
Reply to comment by Mercury82jg in US opens investigation into Tesla seat belts coming loose by StevenSanders90210
If you have the money to hold shorts, it’ll pay off eventually. Tesla is comically overvalued
They are highest valued auto manufacturer in the world, yet produce faar less cars than the next top 10 manufacturers.
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_jb9t4yg wrote
Reply to comment by DoubleCTech in Humans Started Riding Horses 5,000 Years Ago, New Evidence Suggests by geoxol
The original horses were quite small. They’re only very large now because of thousands of years of selectively breading them to be ridden
And there was probably some horseback riding before, but speculation without evidence is meaningless. This is simply the earliest evidence we have
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_ja88s1v wrote
Reply to comment by ledow in Didn't fear and rescued by M178music
The main reason to do that is because it can be really hard to get out of ice when you’ve fallen through. It’s ice, there’s nothing to grab to hoist yourself up, and will more easily break around an edge when putting weight on it, so you can easily get stuck
By laying on the ice you lower your chance of breaking through, which is the only thing you should worry about. Getting a bit wet and cold is better than soaking and freezing
When I snowmobile on lakes in the winter I have this necklace thing that pulls apart into two handheld spikes so you can stab the ice to get some grip to pull yourself out.
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_j95vfhy wrote
Reply to comment by Xinlitik in Plants are spreading up mountains faster than thought in North America by BlitzOrion
In short, it’s complicated
It could effect wildlife as a niche is being encroached. It could also effect growth as perhaps the lack of certain vegetation helps with nutrient rich runoff coming down the mountain.
As for the change in number of trees, I’m going to take a guess that it would be a drop in the bucket relative to the forest clearings we’ve been doing elsewhere
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_j8t0mmd wrote
Reply to comment by jacket13 in Earth changing seasons. by ooMEAToo
It’s slightly more complicated than “it’s growing”
If you’re talking about Antarctica, it has warmed (at a rate much faster than elsewhere) which increases precipitation. In the short term that means more cumulative snowfall and ice build up. Long term, that trend will reverse as the warming losses begin to outweigh the precipitation increase
If you’re talking and in the arctic, then that is very misleading. While, yes, the winter has ice sheets growing at rates faster than decades ago, it is melting at even faster rates in the summer. So in the end every year has less and less ice
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_j8jcv9b wrote
Reply to comment by Lazaruzo in Physicists Say Aliens May Be Using Black Holes as Quantum Computers : ScienceAlert by Gari_305
It’s just theorizing about what would something we could detect were it out there. Coming up with something that would be theoretically possible and how we’d be able to detect it were it out there
Gotta theorize about one to detect the other… and gotta get clicks with outrageous titles
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_j7ulxl8 wrote
Reply to comment by OfLittleToNoValue in New species identified, from 3D models of prehistoric penguins’ humongous humerus, may be the largest penguin ever to have lived. ~350-pound ‘Kumimanu fordycei’ weighed as much as an adult gorilla; waded the waters off New Zealand about 60 million years ago by marketrent
The Carboniferous period, names after the massive coal (carbon) deposits we discovered all around the world from those trees
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_j63om9e wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Asteroid-Mining Startup Plans First Private Mission to Deep Space by psychothumbs
Which is why when new deposits are discovered, no one makes any money…. Wait
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_j3sq4ew wrote
Reply to comment by Rear-gunner in Controversial Proposal to Reduce Global Warming Could Threaten Ozone Regeneration by Rear-gunner
Heat allowing plants to grow faster reaches a max pretty quickly followed by a significant drop in efficiency due to moisture loss in the leaves via the stomata (stomata are the small pores in leaves that open to take in C02 and expel O2)
Too hot and the leaves need to become smaller and reduce the amount of CO2 they absorb or else they lose too much water to the air and dry out.
Don’t know why I keep seeing this “it’s better for plants” nonsense. Like claiming a flood is good because it provides everyone water… before drowning them
Also, famine is what you went for? We produce more than enough food right now, it’s distribution that’s the problem. Or will hotter temps allow for easier food distribution?
Edit: To add, it doesn’t matter what the world was like millions of years ago or how animals will adapt… we are adapted for the unusually stable climate of the last few thousand years. Our entire civilization; food production, population distribution, etc; is all based on the current climate. As the climate changes the cost of adapting will become untenable. If the 2 million refugees of the Syrian war was bad, what do you imagine a billion+ climate refugees will be like. There are already population migrations because of climate change, megacities running out of water (dependent on no-longer predictable rains or melted glaciers) rising coastlines, declining seafood stocks, etc. This isn’t going to happen tomorrow, but it will probably be your children and children’s children that will really start to feel its impact
We will adapt, we’re the most adaptable creature that has ever lived, but without doing something now to combat climate change the costs will be unimaginable.
And this may seem doom and gloom… but that’s because it is! We’ve known definitively about this for 50 years and have done nothing. The oil companies themselves discovered this, but chose to bury it and spend billions on misinformation.
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_ixhcs32 wrote
Reply to comment by Not_Legal_Advice_Pod in How to test if we’re living in a computer simulation by izumi3682
How so?
There is as much a point to existence if this is the real or if it’s a simulation. In either case, you’re just one being on a single planet in an infinite cosmos. How does it being a simulation suddenly give it a “meaning”?
Or is it that you’re assuming that if it’s a simulation, it’s a simulation for us. Which is a wild assumption to make on top of the wild assumption of this being simulation in the first place.
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_itlodex wrote
Reply to comment by CrashRiot in Michigan family of 4 who went missing for a week has been found by wwabc
To be clear, they publicly mandated industrial alcohols, i.e. those not for human consumption, have additives . While not exactly good, it’s not like they were poisoning drinking alcohol or did it secretly as it was new regulation for public companies that were making those industrial alcohols
The number of deaths is also impossible to calculate as even un-modified industrial alcohol can cause deaths when improperly distilled by bootleggers
DeepSpaceNebulae t1_je9tnuu wrote
Reply to comment by SwordfishAlert2602 in TIL The organizers of the Japan Olympics in 2021 distributed 160,000 condoms to the athletes by Future_Green_7222
My joke conspiracy about the olympics is that it’s all just a secret plan to breed super-humans