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from fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz on 30 Apr 20:07
https://mander.xyz/post/29081730

…betterlesson.com/…/oreo-cookie-national-parks

#science_memes

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logicbomb@lemmy.world on 30 Apr 20:36 next collapse

It’s a little difficult to see the oreo cookie wafer on the dark background. I think it would work better with a white background. Something like milk.

Asafum@feddit.nl on 30 Apr 20:43 next collapse

Fuuuuuck the flat earthers were correct and the earth looks delicious.

I want some of that sweet sweet magma…

<img alt="" src="https://c.tenor.com/zhGXtAHUE2YAAAAC/tenor.gif">

SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world on 30 Apr 20:52 next collapse

I’ve been thinking a bit about this lately: creative use of everyday items to demonstrate natural phenomena might be an indicator of high intelligence.

andros_rex@lemmy.world on 03 May 04:56 collapse

Tbh it’s more that science teachers are broke lol - one of the most inspirational/effective/but also probably violated the Geneva convention training program taught me explicitly - being a teacher means there is no thirty minute lunch and the best lessons are made with shit you get from the dumpsters at Home Depot.

Hjalamanger@feddit.nu on 30 Apr 20:57 next collapse

I feel like the best analogy for this type of geology is a frozen lake. The ice moves and creates mountains and… um cracks. Lucky we don’t get that on earth but it’s still a nice analogy

wolframhydroxide@sh.itjust.works on 30 Apr 21:06 collapse

We do get cracks. They’re the divergent plate boundaries. Water and ice just flow on time scales far too dissimilar to make an appropriate rate model at the cracks.

CommissarVulpin@lemmy.world on 30 Apr 21:10 collapse

I wonder if you could make a decent model of plate tectonics with wax. Have a pan of wax heated from below, deep enough that the top is cool enough to be solid.

wolframhydroxide@sh.itjust.works on 30 Apr 21:14 collapse

Ooh, interesting! Perhaps if you cooled the top and heated the bottom quickly enough? The biggest problem is that the convective drag needs to be high enough to cause actual subduction. In my Earth Science class, I just add mica powder to water, heat it from below, and show them Rayleigh-Benard convection cells.

alekwithak@lemmy.world on 30 Apr 21:52 next collapse

Are these double stuffed or has shrinkflation really hit Oreos that hard?

jabathekek@sopuli.xyz on 30 Apr 22:42 next collapse

I did this a lot with poptarts as a kid. I’m sure I would still do it, but I hate poptarts now.

AtariDump@lemmy.world on 01 May 01:13 collapse

Chicken chicken chicken