Definitely one of the coolest thing I have ever seen. Both links are worth reading full; full of some amazing and shocking facts!http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/earthhowmuch.htmlhttp://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/earthwherewater.html[There are more links on each of the 2 pages you can follow, for example, rivers, lakes, glaciers, etc]Example of a shocking fact:
12/30/2010 9:08:14 AM
Interesting....I woulda thought that it would be bigger
12/30/2010 9:15:29 AM
me too
12/30/2010 9:18:20 AM
THAT'S WHAT SHE SAID
12/30/2010 9:20:50 AM
so did i... but considering that it is hard to see 3d on a screen, it does make sense.that ball is 860 MILES tall!!!and also considering that oceans are mostly about 2-5 miles deep, and they contain 96% of all the water, a ball of water 860 miles high makes sense.
12/30/2010 9:21:13 AM
Yeah, the whole "70% of Earth's surface is covered in water" statement makes it seem like there's much more water on the Earth than there really is. That's the impression I always had at least.[Edited on December 30, 2010 at 9:23 AM. Reason : imagine how bad it would suck if that really happened, then the ball of water burst...]
12/30/2010 9:22:45 AM
Kiss north and south america good bye! (and nearby places toooooooo!)
12/30/2010 9:26:48 AM
all your water are belong to U.S.
12/30/2010 9:29:28 AM
The ISS (Int. Space Station) is at an altitude of about 220 miles, so this ball would be 4 times higher!And that truly gives you perspective, and then it is easy to see why that size ball makes sense. It is friggin massive!And this:
12/30/2010 9:43:00 AM
yea, that sphere is actually fucking huge. it'd be a small moon (keep in mind the radius of this sphere is about 700km): http://www.usefulcharts.com/math-and-science/astronomy/planets-and-moons.htmlby the way,Colorado is fucked
12/30/2010 10:10:02 AM
that'd be pretty baller for like the early settlers though. be driving your wagon across the plain and come across a giant ball of water sitting on the groundplus, it'd be the ultimate resource. first person to settle that area is gonna make a truckload of cash selling that stuff[Edited on December 30, 2010 at 12:03 PM. Reason : .]
12/30/2010 12:03:11 PM
haha that would be funny.i wonder though, if one came across it, if they could tell it was a sphere.well, you could definitely drive to the point where it would be touching the ground (with a huge mass of water above you!), and then if you looked back, it would extend 430 miles out, but i doubt one could see the curvature as it is so huge. you can only see, what some 15 miles at the most (the horizon). so i would say no one would be able to tell it was a sphere. i do wonder, though, how it would look from hundreds of miles away. perhaps from a few hundred miles away, one could make out it is a sphere.
12/30/2010 12:09:11 PM
pretty cool thread. i checked out one of the sites briefly, but i'm going to go back and read some more. nice find.
12/30/2010 12:34:52 PM
I want to see someone animate that ball hitting the earth, and watch it trickle into the oceans
12/30/2010 12:35:56 PM
I don't buy it.If that bubble were butter, you couldn't hardly spread that shit HALF way around the world.They fucked up.[Edited on December 30, 2010 at 1:31 PM. Reason : .]
12/30/2010 1:30:31 PM
It's not butter and you're bad at both math and conceptualizing.The average depth of our oceans is 12,430ft. That sphere has a diameter of 4,540,800ft.It's not your fault though. Humans are very very bad at conceptualizing the very large or very old.
12/30/2010 1:36:34 PM
It's okay that you don't have common sense.It's visually apparent that the ball can't cover the surface of earth
12/30/2010 1:38:08 PM
Why a sphere?I've always been a bigger advocate of the rhombus
12/30/2010 1:41:33 PM
12/30/2010 1:44:40 PM
Where all da dead fishies at?
12/30/2010 1:46:12 PM
12/30/2010 1:52:31 PM
^^^ Agree. The 3d image is screwing with everyones mind. An 860 mile diamater ball of water is just freaking huge. Compared to the DEPTH of the Earth's crust/mantle/core, that sphere ratio looks about right. The depth of the oceans are just tiny compared to the Earth itself. Considering the Earth's diameter is about 7,900 miles and the ocean is only a mile or two deep on average, it just looks misleading when it's put next to the mass of the Earth.Edit...I see now that the statistic includes ice caps[Edited on December 30, 2010 at 2:00 PM. Reason : ]
12/30/2010 1:55:21 PM
NotGeniuSxBoY, define 'cover'. Did you read this:
12/30/2010 1:56:27 PM
12/30/2010 1:59:14 PM
12/30/2010 2:34:25 PM
12/30/2010 2:34:46 PM
looking at that photo, we may have reached peak butter
12/30/2010 2:41:31 PM
kudos to GeniuSxBoY
12/30/2010 2:43:33 PM
12/30/2010 2:45:15 PM
^^trolling nerds and especially in The Lounge should be a ban-able offense.
12/30/2010 2:48:37 PM
^^ most of the sphere would be ice
12/30/2010 3:14:38 PM
^ all the freshwater fish would be dead anyway
12/30/2010 4:16:22 PM
If you hunt down the high resolution copy of that image you can actually zoom in on the sphere of water and see Kevin Costner and Dennis Hopper battling it out.
12/31/2010 12:21:47 AM
They're not accounting for all the undiscovered under-ocean rivers and reservoirs. Imagine the butter spreading and melting into the earth's porous surface. If you calculate only the surface butter, you'd miss the other half of the butter that soaked through the surface.Plus, this sucker needs toasting before you butter it. I think Mars would look better buttered, don't you?
12/31/2010 1:31:14 AM
i like this thread.
12/31/2010 1:48:16 AM
I love size comparisons. (yeah, yeah)here are some other ones of the solar system i've always liked.Pluto and Charon (it's moon) compared to the US. Inner planets (with pluto)Outer planets compared to inner planetsSolar system compared to sun...and i could go on comparing the sun to other stars, but i wont.
12/31/2010 1:55:53 AM
DO ITI AN'T SKURRED
12/31/2010 9:10:44 AM
I just went out and saw the ISS... and then I thought, that's only a quarter of the way up compared to that ball of water...FUCKTHAT BALL IS MASSIVE!!! ^^
12/31/2010 8:48:19 PM
12/31/2010 10:39:35 PM
If all the world's water were collected in one place as a sphere, what would be the diameter of that sphere?Definitely putting that as one of the bonus questions on all my 6 final exams that I am gonna make and give in about 10 days! I am sad no one ever asked me that question, and that I never pondered it on my own, because I would have loved to see now how close my guess would have been to the actual answer. Now I will never know. Definitely asking the wife, though (and parents and siblings and friends), before I show it to them.
1/2/2011 9:30:17 PM
1/4/2011 12:16:21 PM
1/4/2011 6:23:03 PM
ITT we compare all the water to earth.IT embed, we see how much space we take up if all the people in the world stood shoulder to shoulder. <div><object width="512" height="322"><param name="movie" value="http://d.yimg.com/static.video.yahoo.com/yep/YV_YEP.swf?ver=2.2.46" /><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="AllowScriptAccess" VALUE="always" /><param name="bgcolor" value="#000000" /><param name="flashVars" value="id=23705197&vid=8694414&lang=en-us&intl=us&thumbUrl=http%3A//l.yimg.com/a/i/us/sch/cn/video04/8694414_rnda2cf8b7f_19.jpg&embed=1&ap=12135647" /><embed src="http://d.yimg.com/static.video.yahoo.com/yep/YV_YEP.swf?ver=2.2.46" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="512" height="322" allowFullScreen="true" AllowScriptAccess="always" bgcolor="#000000" flashVars="id=23705197&vid=8694414&lang=en-us&intl=us&thumbUrl=http%3A//l.yimg.com/a/i/us/sch/cn/video04/8694414_rnda2cf8b7f_19.jpg&embed=1&ap=12135647" ></embed></object><br /><a href="http://video.yahoo.com/watch/8694414/23705197">7 Billion, National Geographic Magazine</a> @ <a href="http://video.yahoo.com" >Yahoo! Video</a></div>
1/5/2011 3:59:28 AM
1/5/2011 9:34:12 AM
^, ^^ nice, thanks!I asked one of my classes today (uni students) orally, and the answers were far too big. For size of the water ball they ranged from1/2 the volume of the earth (which means 80% of the earth's diameter)to25% of the earth's diameter (1/64 of the earth's volume)when in reality it is about 11% of the earth's diameter (1/777 = 0.13% of the earth's volume).I showed them the picture, told them it was 860 miles, and even related it to the distance between 2 cities here which is about 900 miles, and then I asked them if the water were poured over the US, how deep it would reach.Interestingly, now the answers were far too small, ranging from1 foot (he later changed it to 3 feet)to4.5 mileswhen in reality it is 90 miles.The human mind definitely has trouble comprehending volume (and exponential growth too, which was also made clear by the answers to another question I asked them).
1/5/2011 5:28:14 PM
Cool story, bro.
1/5/2011 5:42:59 PM