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originally posted by: Ophiuchus 13
a reply to: FyreByrd
Sometimes I think that when oil is extracted the natural interior planetary lubricants run low. Further this can cause issues when plates slide. Deeper what if some of the aquifers are near oil reserves and when an oil reserve gets low water within aquifers near weak wall to wall points of oil reserve and aquifer fail causing water to enter voids where oil was once present why at same time lowering water reserves seen above ground...
originally posted by: Hijinx
a reply to: FyreByrd
We are hardly at crisis levels, and if you're bringing up the law of thermodynamics, by the time this law has significantly affected our water supply we will have far worse things to worry about than our water supply.
originally posted by: ketsuko
Nice condescending attitude. Just because I don't think we can affect overall global climate doesn't mean I don't think we can have serious regional impact - see the Dust Bowl.
Yes, one of the problems Californians are going to have is that they are draining their aquifers in the recent drought. There isn't enough refill. It has been speculated that part of the seismic activity in California recently is due to aquifer subsidence, meaning those aquifers will not refill even when the water comes back.
originally posted by: FyreByrd
originally posted by: Hijinx
a reply to: FyreByrd
We are hardly at crisis levels, and if you're bringing up the law of thermodynamics, by the time this law has significantly affected our water supply we will have far worse things to worry about than our water supply.
You are confusing freshwater and saltwater. Two very different substances. Saltwater evaporates into the atmosphere where it condenses into clouds that eventually rain down somewhere. This natural process is being well outstripped by irresponsible and misuse of freshwater sources.