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There is every good reason to think so! Solids and liquids are incredibly difficult to compress because there is so little space between the particles. Think about how and why a syringe is able to inject fluids. Rock just can't be compressed. If there was a tiny degree of compression across the planet it would be of little or no consequence considering the volume of water involved. Epic fail, sorry.
But, the material that sunk was not solid nor liquid. For example all the plants, animals and humans are not solid. And even the non organic material can have lot of air/gas mixed in, soil is not solid, there is always air mixed in.brunumb wrote: ↑Wed Sep 06, 2023 5:20 am There is every good reason to think so! Solids and liquids are incredibly difficult to compress because there is so little space between the particles. Think about how and why a syringe is able to inject fluids. Rock just can't be compressed. If there was a tiny degree of compression across the planet it would be of little or no consequence considering the volume of water involved. Epic fail, sorry.
You are clutching at straws. All those things are predominantly solid and liquid with little space between the particles. All the animals and plants together would not compress to the degree or scale that would be needed.1213 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 07, 2023 5:55 amBut, the material that sunk was not solid nor liquid. For example all the plants, animals and humans are not solid. And even the non organic material can have lot of air/gas mixed in, soil is not solid, there is always air mixed in.brunumb wrote: ↑Wed Sep 06, 2023 5:20 am There is every good reason to think so! Solids and liquids are incredibly difficult to compress because there is so little space between the particles. Think about how and why a syringe is able to inject fluids. Rock just can't be compressed. If there was a tiny degree of compression across the planet it would be of little or no consequence considering the volume of water involved. Epic fail, sorry.
Difficult to know how much there was organic material. On basis of the sizes of coal, gas and oil fields, there could have been lot of animals and plants. However, I don't think there were the only thing compressed. There could have been lot of material that is not very dense on dry land. And in this case I think it is good to understand, lot of stuff got mixed in sediments where they could have caused air pockets and large cave systems, which some of have later collapsed causing the effect that water level drops.
No, no, no. You do not appreciate the immense volume of water involved. Even if there were mountains of candy floss, the decrease in volume due to compression would achieve very little. Solids an liquids, even if organic, will noy compress to any appreciable degree. Your scenario is an epic fail.1213 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 4:29 amDifficult to know how much there was organic material. On basis of the sizes of coal, gas and oil fields, there could have been lot of animals and plants. However, I don't think there were the only thing compressed. There could have been lot of material that is not very dense on dry land. And in this case I think it is good to understand, lot of stuff got mixed in sediments where they could have caused air pockets and large cave systems, which some of have later collapsed causing the effect that water level drops.