rich:

you were right ! If you select just the highlighted text , it works,
if you double
click , like most hyperlink, then it select all the text, and goes no where!

regards
michael barron


On Fri, Mar 26, 2010 at 10:21 PM, Rich Murray <[email protected]> wrote:
> El Solitario 29.4982 -103.7625, 1.254 km low inside 13 km wide circles --
>  possible tornado type vortex ablation: Rich Murray 2010.03.26
> http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.htm
> Friday, March 26, 2010
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/astrodeep/message/46
> _________________________________________________
>
>
> 2010.03.26 Friday
>
> This morning, 10 AM during the weekly meeting of the Friday
> Morning Group at Saint Johns College coffee shop
> in Santa Fe, NM,
> I again ran into this puzzling, remarkable crater.
>
> The vision jelled that this may be the site of a huge
> tornado-hurricane flow formation, rotating counterclockwise,
> for long enough in this spot to leave spiral ridges around the
> inner more flat center, surrounded by concentric ridges from
> high pressure and heat gas flows that would have carried the
> heat along with shattered, melted, and vaporized minerals up
> above the stratosphere.
>
> The wider grey and white areas to the N, NNE, E, and SE
> may mark the movement of the vortex as it started to form
> and contract.
>
> Like tornados, such a vortex may jump around, ablating the
> landscape into circular forms.
>
> The evidence can be surveyed to assess the range of sizes and
> lifetimes of such firestorm vortexes.
> .
> Rich Murray 8:55 PM
>
> Dennis Cox, amateur extraordinaire, with 6 views given via
> Google Earth by Rich Murray of 360 m high mountain E of
> Fresno, CA, with uphill and then downhill ejecta melt flows --
> informative book with 92 color images: 2010.03.25
> http://rmforall.blogspot.com/2010_03_01_archive.htm
> Thursday, March 25, 2010
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/astrodeep/message/45
> _________________________________________________
>
>
> http://www.impactstructure.net/working-hypothesis.html
> Tim McElvain, BS geology
>
> "The furthest south I have found quartz with planar
> microstructures is in Big Bend National Park in far west Texas.
> There also is a structure there called the Solitario, the formation
> of which looks like an impact structure, but researchers have not
> been able to convince the experts that the planar microstructures
> found there are definitive.
>
> [ color relief image ]
>
> K.  El Solitario
>
> I believe more work should be done on this crater before it is
> completely condemned as an impact structure.
> The problem being that the only sedimentary rock with quartz is
> some one thousand meters below the present surface the
> Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments would have to be added,
> and the shock wave attenuated and lost enough energy traveling
> through the target rock to shock the quartz in this formation with
> enough energy to generate planar deformation structures.
>
> Copyright © 2010 Thornton H. (Tim) McElvain."
> _________________________________________________
>
>
> 2010.03.26 10:34 AM MST
>
> Dear Murray,
>
> I am organizing and constructing a new page with the information
> of my research on palaeolagoons.
> I'll  update the page frequently -- it's under construction.
>
> http://sites.google.com/site/cosmopier/
>
> thanks for your attention,
> Pierson Barretto [email protected]
> _________________________________________________
>
> ============================================================
> FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
> Meets Fridays 9a-11:30 at cafe at St. John's College
> lectures, archives, unsubscribe, maps at http://www.friam.org
>

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