https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...-snake-like-wood-travelling-water-stream.html
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It looks like a kudu horn.
Very interested as well. The other day I collected a piece of “garbage” fron my workplace. It was the extruded junk from a metal drill, but in perfect spiral shape.
Enjoypolo - you're in the heart of the land of star forts too! This map has so many tagged:
goo.gl/maps/xqsY5qKsbPE2
You wonder why I posted to this thread though - it's because some of the star forts I've been looking at are right along a river - high-flying speculation - but what if a good design could have generated power? Maybe it's a stretch to think an electric connection here, but interesting. Probably more mundane ... water, makes great moats.... and you have plenty of canals there.
FYI - take a peek at that fort on the map in New Mexico - please tell me that's something that only a few hundred years old -- riiiiiight. There's tons more that aren't tagged on this map, a whole chain in the mountains of Haiti.
Here's another great resource: http://www.jacobbogle.com/fortress-earth.html
Cheers!
Yes, but water decomposed into its primitive elements... and decomposed doubtless, by electricity, which will then have become a powerful and manageable force, for all great discoveries, by some inexplicable law, appear to agree and become complete at the same time.
Yes, my friends, I believe that water will one day be employed as fuel, that hydrogen and oxygen which constitute it, used singly or together, will furnish an inexhaustible source of heat and light, of an intensity of which coal is not capable. Some day the coalrooms of steamers and the tenders of locomotives will, instead of coal, be stored with these two condensed gases, which will burn in the furnaces with enormous calorific power.
There is, therefore, nothing to fear. As long as the earth is inhabited it will supply the wants of its inhabitants, and there will be no want of either light or heat as long as the productions of the vegetable, mineral or animal kingdoms do not fail us. I believe, then, that when the deposits of coal are exhausted we shall heat and warm ourselves with water.
Water will be the coal of the future!