"I'd rather chill in this thread": why nonsense don't go away

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  • unkle
    Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
    • Mar 2007
    • 10174

    Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

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    • floridaorange
      I'm merely a humble butler
      • Dec 2005
      • 29116

      Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

      Originally posted by unkle



      It was fun while it lasted...

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      • unkle
        Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
        • Mar 2007
        • 10174

        Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

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        • tiddles
          Encryption, Jr.
          • Jun 2004
          • 6861

          Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

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          • Dhar_2
            meat and potatoes
            • Jun 2004
            • 18917

            Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

            ^ where are the others?

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            • Dhar_2
              meat and potatoes
              • Jun 2004
              • 18917

              Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread


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              • Dhar_2
                meat and potatoes
                • Jun 2004
                • 18917

                Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread


                Comment

                • Dhar_2
                  meat and potatoes
                  • Jun 2004
                  • 18917

                  Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread


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                  • res0nat0r
                    Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
                    • May 2006
                    • 14475

                    Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

                    Originally posted by Dhar_2

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                    • anas
                      Addiction started
                      • Jun 2010
                      • 437

                      Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

                      Originally posted by Dhar_2
                      ^ where are the others?

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                      • tynth
                        Addiction started
                        • Feb 2005
                        • 461

                        Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

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                        • unkle
                          Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
                          • Mar 2007
                          • 10174

                          Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

                          Comment

                          • unkle
                            Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
                            • Mar 2007
                            • 10174

                            Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

                            Comment

                            • unkle
                              Someone MARRY ME!! LOL
                              • Mar 2007
                              • 10174

                              Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

                              Comment

                              • floridaorange
                                I'm merely a humble butler
                                • Dec 2005
                                • 29116

                                Re: The N**sensical Gif-eroo thread

                                They look like scenes straight out of the latest sci-fi blockbuster, futuristic landscapes from a distant alien world.

                                But this is planet Earth at its most magnificent, the spectacular quirks of mother nature that continue to astound and delight in equal measure.

                                From the vivid colours of a beautiful hot spring to a random rock formation that looks just like an elephant, the incredible landscapes have formed over millions of years.


                                The Wave: (Utah, USA) Carved rock eroded into a wave-like formation made of jurrasic-age Navajo sandstone that is approximately 190 million years old


                                The Beauty Pool: (Yellowstone National Park, USA) The hot spring allows luminous algae and bacteria to flourish creating a vivid array of colours


                                Another view of Beauty Pool in Yellowstone National Park. It is connected to a nearby pool called Chromatic Spring and when the water level in one rises, the water level in the other decreases

                                Take Beauty Pool, a much visited site in the Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, where the hot spring has allowed algae and bacteria to flourish creating a staggeringly beautiful array of luminous colours.

                                More...



                                Or the incredible sliding stones of Death Valley, California - the movement of which continues to baffle experts, who remain at a loss to explain how these enormous boulders, weighing up to 700 pounds each, have slid across a perfectly flat bed.
                                The Wave in Utah, USA, is a swooping curve of sandstone rock, 190 million years old, that has been gradually eroded by wind and rain to create a spectacular natural display.


                                The Moeraki Boulders: (New Zealand) The gigantic boulders started forming on the ocean floor and can now been seen sitting mysteriously on the coastline thanks to centuries of erosion


                                The sliding stones: (Death Valley, California, USA) The movement of the rocks continues to baffle experts who are at a loss to explain why they have moved across a perfectly flat bed despite weighing up to 700 pounds each


                                The Peculiar Pinnacles: (Nambung National Park, Western Australia) These amazing natural limestone structures, some standing as high as five metres, were formed approximately 25,000 to 30,000 years ago after the sea receded and left deposits of shells


                                Crater Lake: (Oregon, USA) Formed about 150 years ago by the collapse of the volcano Mount Mazama


                                Elephant Rock: ( Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada, USA) A strange natural sandstone rock formation which looks like an elephant


                                Balls Pyramid: (Lord Howe Island, New South Wales, Australia) The world's tallest sea stack, at 562 metres formed through processes of coastal geomorphology, which are entirely natural. Time, wind, and water are the only factors involved


                                Hiller Lake: (Western Australia) Scientists cannot explain the pink colour although they have proven it is not due to the presence of algae

                                Then there is the mysterious bright pink Lake Hiller in Western Australia. Its startling colour remains a mystery and while scientists have proven it's not due to the presence of algae, unlike the other salt lakes down under, they still can't explain why it's pink.

                                One can only imagine how these incredible sights would have stunned our early ancestors. The Moeraki Boulders for example, that sit mysteriously on the New Zealand coastline, resemble giant eggs laid by some terrible monster from the deep.

                                Or travel inland to New Zealand's Champagne Pool - where hot water containing gold, silver, mercury, sulphur and arsenic bubbles up like a fiery pit.

                                Other wonders include the Great Blue Hole in Belize - A large submarine sinkhole which is over 984 feet across and 407 feet deep formed during several episodes of quaternary glaciation when sea levels were much lower.
                                The peculiar pinnacles at Nambung National Park, Western Australia - amazing natural limestone structures, some standing as high as five metres, were formed approximately 25,000 to 30,000 years ago after the sea receded and left deposits of sea shells.

                                Over time, coastal winds removed the surrounding sand leaving the pillars exposed.

                                The Great Blue Hole: (Belize) A large submarine sinkhole which is over 984 feet across and 407 feet deep formed during several episodes of quaternary glaciation when sea levels were much lower


                                Badwater Salt Flats: (California, USA) This is the lowest point of the United States at -282 feet


                                Tsingy: (Ankarana National Park, Northern Madagascar) A series of carpet limestone pinnacles


                                The Champagne Pool: (Waiotapu Geothermal area of New Zealand) A colourful hot spring with a surface temperature of 74 degrees celsius. It bubbles due to uprising carbon dioxide



                                Tufa Pinnacles: (Mono Lake, Sierra Nevada, USA) Mono Lake is a closed hydrological basin meaning water flows into it but it doesn't flow out. The only way for water to leave is through evaporation


                                Bryce Amphitheatre: (Bryce Canyon National Park, Utah, USA) The bizarre pinnacles of limestone rock and eroding fins create a majestic display


                                The Puente del Inca: (Argentina) A natural rock bridge covered by bright orange and yellow bacteria mats created by natural sulphur springs which cover the rock walls


                                Rainforest sinkhole: (Jaua-Sarisarinama National Park, Venezuela) A sinkhole is the natural depression of or hole in the Earth's surface

                                It was fun while it lasted...

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