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MethrenRaf

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 According to the researchers who investigated the puzzling case, it was a  colossal cannibal great white shark.  We found that the original YouTube video we posted this morning belongs to the documentary The Search for the Oceans Super Predator, produced by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. It seems that the Smithsonian Channel repackaged it into another documentary c stanley canada alled Hunt for the Super Predator. The documentary narrates the scientific effort to catalogue Australias great whites and the search for the killer of a 9-foot great white, tagged just four months earlier with a  borraccia stanley tracking device that recorded location, depth, and temperature. When they found the sharks  black box  on a beach, the data contained inside bewildered the scientists. Everything indicated that something huge ate the 9-foot great white. But what could do something like that   It was only after further study of the bigger migrating great whites that came into the area where the9-footer was killed when they  stanley website finally could guess the identity of the mysterious killer.The scientists claim their new research data matched all of the tracking information from the disappeared shark: The body temperature of these migrating great whites was the same, and the size of the cannibal great white shark鈥攚hich they estimated to be 16 foot long and weigh over 2 tons鈥攃ould easily pull off the same speed and trajectory captured in the tracking device. It makes sense: The only thing that could reasonably eat a shark is s Ndnx Lost Girl gives us death and the forbidden booty call
 That idea was in sync with the general drive to make nuclear weapons a solu kubki stanley tion instead of a problem.  Operation Plowshare was underway, trying to make use of nukes.  That project tested atomic bomb to see if they were fit for road construction, the making of artificial lakes, or the generation of hydroelectricity.  Project Cauldron, also known as Project Oilsands, was a nifty little addition to the project.  The idea was to set off as many as a hundre stanley fr d nuclear bombs under the oil sands.  The bombs would heat the oil, making it easier to extract, and would create a sort of cavern underneath the sand to catch any oil that flowed down.  Drilling and extraction should then be easy. Great idea, right   The United States Congress and Alberta   Federal Mines committee thought so.  Residents living near Oilsands were not as enthusiastic.  The nearest town was ten kilometers from the planned site of the first test.  Although the town had only twelve residents, the people there made enough of a fuss to stall the test until the national and international mood shifted away from using nuclear weapons as co stanley cup nstruction equipment.  Too bad.  What harm could have come from setting off a bomb under a massive oil field  Via Why Not Nuke Alberta, CIM.                                                        nuclear bombsScience