Q. At what temperatures do forest fires burn?
An average surface fire on the forest floor might have flames reaching 1 meter in height and can reach temperatures of 800°C (1,472° F) or more. Under extreme conditions a fire can give off 10,000 kilowatts or more per meter of fire front. This would mean flame heights of 50 meters or more and flame temperatures exceeding 1200°C (2,192° F).
This is much hotter than the melting point of aluminum which is under 1,300° F
Moreover, the adiabatic flame temperature of wood burning with air is 1,980 C (3,956 F). Plenty of capability to melt things. How do you think we melted things in ancient times? Atomic power?
“Satellite photos from these before and after images here. Total neighborhoods just decimated or scorched to the ground. And with trees still standing”
Normally “If something were to explode like a piece of equipment, it would blow outward. Why are things melted inward?”
“When you look at the damages that have occurred here, it's just gone, completely gone. Nothing left but ashes on the ground. Texas Panhandle wildfires have burned more than a million acres”
“People dying in their homes, they can't get out, roads being closed because they can't escape.”
Could it be DEWs Directed Energy Weapons causing this extreme heat and damage?
Remember: “This is all happening and it's hurting cattle ranchers the hardest. Over 88% of all beef production comes from the panhandle in Texas. These fires could forever change the beef industry in the United States.”
I can’t transcribe it all due to X’s text limits but this is an INSANE listen 🚨
The Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest, have legends that speak of the ground getting so hot, that you could not walk on it. Those who jumped into creeks and ponds to cool off, were boiled to death. When tectonic plates start to move in serious ways, the friction generates heat beyond what we might imagine. That's what I read, anyway.
Duh.
They weren't painted blue, like Oprah's house.
Retro-reflector roof is the way to go.
Fire is hot.
https://nhmu.utah.edu/sites/default/files/attachments/Wildfire%20FAQs.pdf
This is much hotter than the melting point of aluminum which is under 1,300° F
What temp do desert fires burn
Gold melts at roughly 2000 degrees Fahrenheit. That’s hot.
Moreover, the adiabatic flame temperature of wood burning with air is 1,980 C (3,956 F). Plenty of capability to melt things. How do you think we melted things in ancient times? Atomic power?
“Satellite photos from these before and after images here. Total neighborhoods just decimated or scorched to the ground. And with trees still standing”
Normally “If something were to explode like a piece of equipment, it would blow outward. Why are things melted inward?”
“When you look at the damages that have occurred here, it's just gone, completely gone. Nothing left but ashes on the ground. Texas Panhandle wildfires have burned more than a million acres”
“People dying in their homes, they can't get out, roads being closed because they can't escape.”
Could it be DEWs Directed Energy Weapons causing this extreme heat and damage?
Remember: “This is all happening and it's hurting cattle ranchers the hardest. Over 88% of all beef production comes from the panhandle in Texas. These fires could forever change the beef industry in the United States.”
I can’t transcribe it all due to X’s text limits but this is an INSANE listen 🚨
(Pepe Deluxe)
Marjorie Taylor Greene rages at BBC reporter asking about ‘Jewish space lasers’: ‘Why don’t you f–k off?’
https://nypost.com/2024/03/06/us-news/marjorie-taylor-greene-tells-bbc-reporter-to-f-k-off/
https://www.newsweek.com/marjorie-taylor-greene-emily-maitlis-swear-video-1876333
https://youtu.be/wGZkz3wudo0
thanks for the post op
🙏🏻👊🏻
good to see this post didnt get banned!
Haven't they blamed it on "global warming" yet?
Money
Food
You would think that is backwards, King Charles talked to WEF Klaus about getting control of and destroying the food supply back in 70-71
The Native Americans of the Pacific Northwest, have legends that speak of the ground getting so hot, that you could not walk on it. Those who jumped into creeks and ponds to cool off, were boiled to death. When tectonic plates start to move in serious ways, the friction generates heat beyond what we might imagine. That's what I read, anyway.
Maybe that's where the game "the floor is lava" comes from, ancestral-memory-wise
I sure hope I have my couches nearby if that ever happens.