GIANT SINKHOLE in Siberia...Galactic Cooling to Blame

heckler73

Well-Known Member
I'd consider underground nukes before I considered Aliens. And I'm not even letting the former enter my mind.
The natural explanation is the most likely.
 

vro

Well-Known Member
i just want to explore the entire world and see everything before i die! fuck society i want to be free!
 

brewster81

Well-Known Member
I wonder if their was fracking in the area?
lol fracking or it's true name, hydraulic fracturing does not have any effects like that. I've lived and worked in an area that has literally thousands of fracked wells in it and not one 'crater' has shown up, nor any of the ill effects talked about in Gasland. Media hype fueled by people looking for a handout, been part of the industry since rigs started moving on to private land..
 

Dr.Pecker

Well-Known Member
I was joking about the sink hole. I know people that frack and drill there is nothing clean about it. fracking uses shit tons of fresh water that can never be used again afterword. What do you care you get paid anyway right
 

Dr.Pecker

Well-Known Member
So I was watching some sink hole videos today and made a turn down the dark side of youtube. I guess I will share.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
I was joking about the sink hole. I know people that frack and drill there is nothing clean about it. fracking uses shit tons of fresh water that can never be used again afterword. What do you care you get paid anyway right
Bullshit. And you cannot provide a shred of evidence of that.
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
Fresh water that can never be used again?

What toadstool did you creep from under?
 

Dr.Pecker

Well-Known Member
Water is by far the largest component of fracking fluids. According to driller Chesapeake Energy, an initial drilling operation itself may consume from 6,000 to 600,000 US gallons of fracking fluids, but over its lifetime an average well may require up to an additional 5 million gallons of water for full operation and possible restimulation frac jobs.[1]

A 2009 report on modern shale gas by the Groundwater Protection Council, "Modern Shale Gas Development in the United States: A Primer," stated that “[t]he amount of water needed to drill and fracture a horizontal shale gas well generally ranges from about 2 million to 4 million gallons, depending on the basin and formation characteristics.” A 2010 Harvard study found that, on average, water consumption for natural gas produced through fracking ranges from 0.6 to 1.8 gallons of water per MMBtu (Mielke, Anadon and Narayanamurti 2010).

The extraction of so much water for fracking has raised concerns about the ecological impacts to aquatic resources, as well as dewatering of drinking water aquifers. It has also been estimated that the transportation of a million gallons of water (fresh or waste water) requires hundreds of truck trips, increasing the greenhouse gas footprint of oil and gas and contrbuting to air pollution.[2] http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php/Fracking_and_water_consumption
 

Doer

Well-Known Member
He said Pecker, that the water could not be used again. Of course, all water is used again, from the time it smashed into here on Comets, except for the tiny bit we electrolysis.

You both are trying to say fraking pollutes the water table and it does not.
 
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