> The public will sooner or later discover the cure to both global
> warming and future food supply is Algae and the fish that eat algae ,
> adding tin cans does increase the amount if carbon removed from the
> air and increase the available fish basically for free
> http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Giants/Martin/
> its far far too simple for the experts to discover , and there are
> billions of dollars to be made by keeping the taxpayers in the dark
> and researching more expensive cures
> there are many examples of ships sunk as artificial reefs
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truk_Lagoon
> .
> In September 2007, The MTA had approved a contract, worth over $6
> million, that would send more than 1,600 of its retired subway cars to
> be used as artificial reefs.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_reef
> .
> Tin cans are simply mini " ships " , and are exactly the same
> principle , If artificial reefs made from old battle ships are good
> for fish , so are artificial reefs made from food grade used tin cans
Um, your average tin can probably won't last a year in salt water. Maybe
not even a few months.
I do, however, like the name Tincanistan.
> warming and future food supply is Algae and the fish that eat algae ,
> adding tin cans does increase the amount if carbon removed from the
> air and increase the available fish basically for free
> http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Library/Giants/Martin/
> its far far too simple for the experts to discover , and there are
> billions of dollars to be made by keeping the taxpayers in the dark
> and researching more expensive cures
> there are many examples of ships sunk as artificial reefs
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Truk_Lagoon
> .
> In September 2007, The MTA had approved a contract, worth over $6
> million, that would send more than 1,600 of its retired subway cars to
> be used as artificial reefs.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_reef
> .
> Tin cans are simply mini " ships " , and are exactly the same
> principle , If artificial reefs made from old battle ships are good
> for fish , so are artificial reefs made from food grade used tin cans