My guess would be coyote poop. The windows were open and the seats would make a nice den. Also coyotes would minimize the rats which is why the seats weren’t chewed to trash.
My guess would be coyote poop. The windows were open and the seats would make a nice den. Also coyotes would minimize the rats which is why the seats weren’t chewed to trash.
Me too, but I don’t trust scientists, they’re always saying incorrect things and making me angry.
I’ll just flip up the tab on my old school one thank you very much!
I thought this same thing when seeing the title.
They can monitor stationary launchers but the mobile launchers and the Russian missile train are another monster.
SOME OF MY BEST STORIES START OUT LOOKING THROUGH A EMPTY RUM BOTTLE.
If I had pulled this bullshit on my mother, I’d be praying for a life sentence without the possibility of parole.
I realize that you have a vested interest in the whole FCA thing, but to say that Chrysler was not considered an inferior brand or the butt of American reliability jokes shows a lack of knowledge on your part about the big 3 pre-great-recession. Chrysler has been making cars of questionable quality since the late…
>> and then (illuminated by a light put there on purpose) we could see the sharks. As their back is dark gray it was difficult to evaluate the size, but when one turned belly-up, I saw that it was at least three meters long.
I absolutely buy the rest of your story, but you are 100% incorrect that sharks don’t have a brain.
How did you think Amazon ended up buying Whole Foods?
How did you think Amazon ended up buying Whole Foods?
Absolute madness. Here’s a photo from the helicopter of Travis putting a wheel over the abyss
At 200,000 feet, the atmosphere pressure is near 0.019 KPa, yes.
On the inside...The pressure bearing down on the tube is going to be something like 10 tons per sq meter, over it’s entire (unsupported) length.
More critical, hope that there’s never even so much as a pinhole breach of that tube.
Creating a vacuum in a small space is not especially hard. A huge space, like a 3 meter tube 100s of miles long is something else entirely—borderline impossible. The force is something like 10 tons per sq meter, pressing on thin skin of steel, with no internal supports.
And let’s not even think about pedestrian impact regulations.
And no where to hang a license plate.
Aren’t airbags mandatory as well? This isn’t a street-legal production car, it’s a track toy.