Doesn’t decay, rot require oxygen. Probably used up rather quickly.
Doesn’t decay, rot require oxygen. Probably used up rather quickly.
This all reminds me of my 7th grade science class: we went outside (on a beautiful spring day) on the football field and had big blue trays of sand and that we could set at different angles. There was a hose at the top of the trays that let us also control the flow of water.
From there we were able to create mini 'rivers' and watch how the courses changed, forming ox-bow rivers etc. I remember realizing that what had happened at False river, where friends had a camp that we'd go skiing and hang out.
It was a great lesson and one that has stuck with me all these years.
That's correct. That is why the Chicot Aquifer is brackish south of Abbevile. The Chicot Aquifer has variable depth and thickness. In some places it is divided into the upper chicot and lower chicot with a clay break between. You can reach a sand as high as 35 feet deep but it is usually not water bearing. It can be almost 500 feet deep and 400 feet thick in some parts. I just completed a well near Loureauville that was almost 500 feet deep with a static water level of 11.0 feet. Almost an Artisian well. It produces a boat load of water.
CharlieK--Trying to send you a pm. Clean your box bro
Well, here is today's nugget for the global warming crowd to fret about.
https://www.theatlantic.com/technolo...-trash/584131/
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