SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- A team of researchers is hoping it can future-proof the California coastline against erosion by zapping the sand with electricity.
Our California coastline is eroding at a pace that some experts fear could accelerate as sea levels rise in the face of climate change.
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Keep beating that dead horse.
A few carefully placed nukes should bind the sand quite nicely.
ReplyDeleteThey have spare electricity in Kalifornia?
ReplyDeleteThat was my first thought.
DeleteSounds like a pipe dream to me
ReplyDeleteJD
Better get those windmills a spinning
ReplyDeleteOkay exactly how and where is the sea level rising? Pictures from the day film was invented show no rise in sea level. Even ancient paintings prove there has been no change. This is all about grant money paying for useless crap to scare the public.
ReplyDeleteYup.
Delete"Our California coastline is eroding at a pace that some experts fear could accelerate as sea levels rise in the face of climate change" says it all.
These insane libs are more likely to electrocute themselves with a defective chinese vibrator than save a cubic yard of beach sand with their "expert" plans. Mock them at every turn. They consider themselves the intellectual elite, but they are the dumbest, most pathetic, and least critical thinkers on the earth. They make the rest of us a little dumber just because they are out there hatching plans based on fairy tales they tell themselves.
DeleteWhat could possibly go wrong?
ReplyDeletePer the sea level gauge at La Jolla, the sea level change has been constant since 1924 at about 2 mm/ year, project to be an increase of about 7" by year 2124. BFD
ReplyDeleteSo now erosion is "climate change"? These people really are dumber than dogshit. I mean I knew it when they decided carbon dioxide was poison but this?! This really drives the point home.
ReplyDeleteI moved to Melbourne, on the east coast of Florida, in late 1979. At that time, the Army Corps of Engineers was starting a beach reclamation project. The Corps was spreading sand on the beach, and in a month or so it was gone. That didn't deter our brave government; they kept on piling it higher and deeper for most of a year. A couple of years later, they started a new project to dredge up that same sand about 20 miles down the beach, where it was stopping up Sebastian Inlet.
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