This was awesome, great barrier reef diving with David Attenborough
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 21 Dec 2016, 09:49
by User
hey ninny, just saw this thread
the reef is incredible, i dived there about fifteen years ago. unfortunately 25% of it has died in my lifetime due to industrial run off from the mines and increased acidity of the oceans
i have family who live up there and the only real substantial industry is tourism, the whole community will be affected by the loss of the reef
not to mention the countless dead species and life forms in the reef itself
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 22 Dec 2016, 07:19
by Ninny
The 25% might be fixed with corals that live a little deeper. And there's a lab trying to speed up coral adaption to the changing environment. This is just mending things though It is worrying but in some way I felt a little better after watching this. There's so much life, we can't destroy it all. Nature will bounce back after we fuck off
I found some more Attenborough with bugs
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 22 Dec 2016, 07:34
by User
yeah i am overall optimistic about humanity eventually managing to stop killing everything too but the reef is gonna be one of those "in my lifetime' things i.e. when i was born it was a wonder of the world, when i die it will be nearly all gone
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 22 Dec 2016, 07:42
by Verbal
what kind of animal is david attenborough
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 22 Dec 2016, 07:56
by User
he is an ape good question
you should do an episode on him
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 22 Dec 2016, 09:30
by happiness and harmony
heyl uke
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 24 Dec 2016, 19:03
by User
hey dusty in bed with gas in this period
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 24 Dec 2016, 21:18
by happiness and harmony
not during the time in question
Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 02 Jan 2017, 08:55
by User
i have composed a map of several pub crawls; only pubs of cask ale provenance, at least 400 years old
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Re: Hey Luke
Posted: 02 Jan 2017, 22:03
by jawn galliano
certainly the hard rock cafe is at least 400 years old, and yet it is not on the list