|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
Futuregen!
__________________
Always strive for the optimum environment, not the minimum environment. Some days you're the dog, other days you're the hydrant |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
HEY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
CHEATER CHEATER PUMPKIN EATER!!!!!!!!
__________________
Too young for Medicare Too old for women to care |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
BrainD is a cheater
__________________
Does the search engine make Carrie's butt look big? - BrianD “The true man wants two things: danger and play. For that reason he wants woman, as the most dangerous plaything.” - Friedrich Nietzsche |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
Wow, a new power plant. From the title, I thought I'd be reading a long thread about how you guys finally got indoor plumbing......
RandalB
__________________
Have Membrane, Will Travel... |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
It's great news for our whole area. Will there be a new lake built for cooling?
__________________
daFrimpster illegitimus non carborundum |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
There will be some large retention ponds, but nothing more than that. The local communities have formed an alliance to ensure the water supply will be adequate.
__________________
Always strive for the optimum environment, not the minimum environment. Some days you're the dog, other days you're the hydrant |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
Perhaps they should do something about PA coal burning?
The ruins of Centralia Pennsylvania no longer exists on some maps. The story began sometime in 1962 along the outskirts of town when trash was burned in the pit of an abandoned strip mine, which connected to a coal vein running near the surface. The burning trash caught the exposed vein of coal on fire. The fire was thought to be extinguished but it apparently wasn't when it erupted in the pit a few days later. Again the fire was doused with water for hours and thought to be out. But it wasn't. The coal then began to burn underground. That was in 1962. For the next two decades, workers battled the fire, flushing the mines with water and fly ash, excavated the burning material and dug trenches, backfilled, drilling again and again in an attempt to find the boundaries of the fire and plan to put the fire out or at least contain it. All efforts failed to do either as government officials delayed to take any real action to save the village. By the early 1980s the fire had affected approximately 200 acres and homes had to be abandoned as carbon monoxide levels reached life threatening levels. An engineering study concluded in 1983 that the fire could burn for another century or even more and "could conceivably spread over an area of approximately 3,700 acres." As time passed, each feeble attempt to do anything to stop the fire or help the residents of Centralia would cost more and more due to the fires progression. Over 44 years and 40 million dollars later the fire still burns through old coal mines and veins under the town and the surrounding hillsides on several fronts. The fire, smoke, fumes and toxic gases that came up through the back yards, basements and streets of Centralia literally ripped the town apart. Most of the homes were condemned and residents were relocated over the years with grants from the federal government although some die-hards refused to be bought out and some still remain in the town. Today Centralia is a virtual ghost town with only a few remaining residents. As they continue to live in their beloved homes now owned by the federal government, people pass every day along Route 61, most totally unaware of the history surrounding them and the sad story of Centralia. Studies have shown that if the fire is not contained it will continue to spread following the rich coal deposits and eventually threaten the neighboring town of Ashland, less that two miles away. Many people including former (and current) residents of Centralia insist that there is more to this story than meets the eye. Some believe that the rich deposits of coal beneath the town itself is the reason for the forced relocation of the towns people and to force the town to go defunct, giving up its mineral rights. The stories around what is happening here vary depending on who you talk to or what you read. What is certain is what has happened to this small community and the fact that Centralia as it one was will never be again. |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
Sad...only a 6 hour drive, maybe I should go for a visit
|
#34
|
|||
|
|||
What does that have to do with this????
__________________
Always strive for the optimum environment, not the minimum environment. Some days you're the dog, other days you're the hydrant |
|
|