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Author Topic: Yangtze River (China) turns red  (Read 2077 times)

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Offline Croix de Fer

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Yangtze River (China) turns red
« on: September 07, 2012, 08:52:00 PM »
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  • Most recent phenomenon of waters around the world turning blood red. Articles here and here.
    Blessed be the Lord my God, who teacheth my hands to fight, and my fingers to war. ~ Psalms 143:1 (Douay-Rheims)


    Offline LaramieHirsch

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #1 on: September 07, 2012, 09:35:30 PM »
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  • I enjoy watching this phenomenon.  It shows that Man is not in control.  Hopefully it'll happen more, though I think the Point will be lost.

    Dear Lord, whatever happens to me after this life, just promise me one thing: Win.
    .........................

    Before some audiences not even the possession of the exactest knowledge will make it easy for what we say to produce conviction. For argument based on knowledge implies instruction, and there are people whom one cannot instruct.  - Aristotle


    Offline Ethelred

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #2 on: September 08, 2012, 04:17:34 AM »
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  • Offline poche

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #3 on: September 08, 2012, 05:24:40 AM »
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  •  :pray: :pray: :pray:

    Offline Elizabeth

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #4 on: September 08, 2012, 01:49:33 PM »
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  •    What does it mean?  So many times now?


    Offline Ethelred

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #5 on: September 08, 2012, 01:56:12 PM »
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  • Quote from: Elizabeth
      What does it mean?  So many times now?


    Most likely it means: Soon we will sink into an ocean of blood.

    Our medieval forefathers knew the language of these omen well. It's helpful to study them (the golden Middle Ages & omen). The modern man and the modern Catholic doesn't want to know anymore, because he thinks he's so clever (we'll soon see soon about that).

    But meanwhile the pictures continue to speak their language, see

    Quote from: Luke XII, 54-56
    And He was also saying to the crowds, "When you see a cloud rising in the west, immediately you say, 'A shower is coming,' and so it turns out. And when you see a south wind blowing, you say, 'It will be a hot day,' and it turns out that way. You hypocrites! You know how to analyse the appearance of the earth and the sky, but why do you not analyse this present time?"


    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #6 on: September 08, 2012, 02:02:48 PM »
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  • For the record:


    http://www.livescience.com/23038-yangtze-river-red.html

    (Don't make this jpg an IMAGE because it's too wide for the thread.
    If you want to see the red water surface, click on this link.)

    http://i.livescience.com/images/i/30836/original/bloodriver.jpg?1347056092






     A stretch of China's longest river has abruptly turned the color of tomato juice, and officials say they don't know why.

    Residents of the southwestern city of Chongqing first noticed that the Yangtze River, called the "golden waterway," had a spreading stain on its reputation yesterday (Sept. 6).

    Though the bright-red water was concentrated around Chongqing, Southwest China's largest industrial center, it was also reported at several other points along the river, according to ABC News.

    Investigators have yet to determine a cause, but the Telegraph reports that environmental officials are considering industrial pollution and silt churned up by recent upstream floods as possible sources for the color.

    One natural explanation for red water that can likely be ruled out is color-producing microorganisms, according to Emily Stanley, a professor of limnology (the study of inland waters) at the University of Wisconsin.

    "When water turns red, the thing a lot of people think of first is red tide," Stanley told Life's Little Mysteries. "But the algae that causes red tide is a marine group and not a freshwater group, so it's highly, highly unlikely that this is a red-tide-related phenomenon."

    Fresh water does occasionally turn blood-red for biological reasons (a lake that turned red during a drought in Texas last summer led to talk of the end times), but Stanley said this is most often due to incursions of color-producing bacteria that arrive when a body of water has less oxygen than normal. Because rivers move constantly, struggling and mixing with the air above them as they go, they rarely ever get the oxygen deficiencies necessary for a life-based red dye job.

    After reviewing a few images of Chongqing's shockingly red river, Stanley put her money on a man-made cause.

    "It looks like a pollutant phenomenon," she said. "Water bodies that have turned red very fast in the past have happened because people have dumped dyes into them."

    An industrial dye dump was in fact the explanation when an urban stretch of another Chinese river, the Jian, turned crimson last December. Investigators traced the color back to a chemical plant that they said had been illegally producing red dye for firework wrappers.

    Still, Stanley says she can't rule out the other possibility officials are now reportedly investigating: an upstream influx of silt. Her instinct, though, is that red clay would be more likely.

    "China is well known for having areas with a lot of steep hill sides and a lot of land use practices that promote soil erosion and soil going into rivers," she said. "You can get red-colored clays that wouldn't be a whole lot different from having a big dose of dye go in there. But if that's the cause I'd imagine there would have had to be a huge storm or a huge amount of clay go into the system."

    Taking another look at the Campbell's-hued Yangtze, she said, "It looks really industrial somehow."

    Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @llmysteries. We're also on Facebook & Google+.

        10 Strangest Sights on Google Earth
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        End Times? Texas Lake Turns Blood-Red






    These red bodies of water all over the world during the past 2+ years reminds
    me of the time they got 4 experts in their fields to come and inspect the image
    of the Virgin of Guadalupe. One was an oil painting expert, one was a fresco
    expert, and two more, like watercolor and something else, but I've forgotten
    what they were. But all 4 of them disagreed. Each one said the image was not
    made using his specialty method, but must be something else, such as - (and he
    suggested one of the other 3 methods).

    Nobody is an "expert" in the method that they suggest is the means in fact.

    The oil painter thought it was a fresco and the fresco specialist thought it was
    a watercolor and the watercolor expert thought it was the 4th method and the
    4th method expert thought it was an oil painting. Something like that.

    Well, it's happening again. Microbiologists think the red water is due to red clay silt
    and the minerologists think the red water is due to microbes, etc. Nobody wants
    to bear responsibility for their judgments.





    The one thing they all seem to agree on is that all this "end time talk" is a bunch
    of hoooey.






    Quote

    "Water bodies that have turned red very fast in the past have happened because people have dumped dyes into them."


    Could the "person" who poured a vial into the Yangtze have been an angel?

    An Angel is a person, you know.



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    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #7 on: September 08, 2012, 02:22:47 PM »
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  • For the record:

    abcnews




    By Katie
    Kindelan



    ChinaFotoPress/ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images


    For a river known as the “golden watercourse,” red is a strange color to see.

    Yet that’s the shade turning up in the Yangtze River and officials have no idea why.

    The red began appearing in the Yangtze, the longest and largest river in China and the third longest river in the world, yesterday near the city of Chongquing, where the Yangtze connects to the Jialin River.

    The Yangtze, called “golden” because of the heavy rainfall it receives year-round,* runs through Chongqing, Southwest China’s largest industrial and commercial center, also known as the “mountain city” because of the hills and peaks upon which its many buildings and factories stand.

    The red color stopped some residents in their tracks. They put water from the river in bottles to save it.  Fishermen and other workers who rely on the river for income kept going about their business, according to the UK’s Daily Mail.

    While the river’s red coloring was most pronounced near Chongqing it was also reported at several other points.

    Officials are reportedly investigating the cause.













    *For the pervert file: LGBT groupies will think this phrase is hilarious. Katie Kindelan could be a little more careful with her words, lets say?
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    Offline JohnGrey

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #8 on: September 08, 2012, 02:26:08 PM »
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  • Daily Mail UK

    Seriously, I'd hate to be trapped in a foxhole with some of you.  If you look at the seventh and eighth pictures in the link above, you can clearly see that there's a silt-like sedimentary deposit being left by the water.  Given that China is the second-largest producer of bauxite, and the Bayer process used in the refinement of bauxite involves red mud, it's almost certainly either raw red mud or, worse still, caustic sludge left over from the refinement.  Either way, the same thing happen in Ajka, Hungary two years ago.

    Here's a picture of waste from Bayer processing:


    Offline Elizabeth

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #9 on: September 08, 2012, 02:30:07 PM »
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  • Quote from: Ethelred


    Our medieval forefathers knew the language of these omen well. It's helpful to study them (the golden Middle Ages & omen). The modern man and the modern Catholic doesn't want to know anymore, because he thinks he's so clever (we'll soon see soon about that).



     :pray:

    Offline Neil Obstat

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    Yangtze River (China) turns red
    « Reply #10 on: September 08, 2012, 02:56:49 PM »
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  • Quote from: JohnGrey

    Seriously, I'd hate to be trapped in a foxhole with some of you.  



    Feelings are mutual.

    But then, I'd hate to be trapped in a foxhole in the first place.



     :kick-can: HAHAHA
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