did the plankton go after your eyeshadow?
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The glowing red ocean.
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Originally posted by devilmunchkin
last week i went down to MOonlight beach in encinitas (near san diego..but you know that, oerdin" ..it was night and the water was glowing blue. ...in bursts as the tides broke. was that flourescent algae or plankton or something altogether different?
I used to see that all the time when my ship was in the middle of the ocean.
ACK!Don't try to confuse the issue with half-truths and gorilla dust!
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Originally posted by devilmunchkin
last week i went down to MOonlight beach in encinitas (near san diego..but you know that, oerdin" ..it was night and the water was glowing blue. ...in bursts as the tides broke. was that flourescent algae or plankton or something altogether different?
I did get a jar full of water and poring a bit of vinager into it really did make them glow brightly.
BTW Encinitas is north of Cardiff isn't it? I'm pretty sure it's right on the coast.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Water, red like Blood.
sounds like Armageddon has begun
Mysterious Frog Eggs Found in Connecticut
Associated Press
BERLIN, Conn. - Hurricane Isabel brought unholy high winds and lashing rain to the East Coast. It also dumped something almost biblical on Connecticut.
Primo D'Agata was startled by what he thought was hail smacking on his porch Sept. 19 as the remnants of Isabel moved through the state. But when he went outside to investigate, D'Agata discovered tiny, gelatinous eggs with dark spots in the middle.
It had apparently been raining frogs.
Since no frogs in Connecticut lay eggs this late in the year, scientists and naturalists speculate they may have come up from North Carolina or another warm location on the winds of Isabel.
D'Agata brought a bowl of his mysterious find to a nearby nature center, after the town's animal control officer couldn't identify what had arrived in his yard.
Nicolas Diaz, a naturalist and teacher at New Britain Youth Museum at Hungerford Park, took a look at D'Agata's bowl and told him it looked like amphibian eggs.
D'Agata is keeping two small, water-filled glass jars of the eggs to see if any of them will hatch. He said a few seem to have sprouted what look like a tail.
"I'm going to let them sit and see what happens," D'Agata said Wednesday.
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Originally posted by TCO
did the plankton go after your eyeshadow?Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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