If you live in an area once covered with ice, you may have seen one of those huge boulders sitting out in the middle of a field and wondered how it got there. You were probably told that it was a glacial erratic from hundreds of miles away, dropped there thousands of years ago by a retreating glacier.
But how did that huge boulder get into the glacier to begin with?
This short video will answer that question.
“On June 24, 2011, a massive rockfall ripped from the top of Mount Rainier’s Nisqually Cleaver, dropping house-sized rocks and thousands of tons of ice onto the Nisqually Glacier below,” explains this YouTube text. “The rockfalls continued for two weeks, affecting skiing and climbing routes. For a full account of the damage, check out the October issue of Backcountry Magazine.”
Back to the basics of natural, unadulterated, real food as our Creator intended. Other subjects that interest us are respect of the natural world, indigenous populations and the truth. No topic too hot to handle. We present you with information to make your own decisions based on your research. If the purchasing power of $50 billion in advertising spent yearly in the US by the food and drug companies can't influence your decisions, then they intend to prevent your options. Vote With Your $$
Monday, November 14, 2011
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