It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: neutronflux
a reply to: Elbereth
And where in the article does it discuss molten metal? Molten metal found? The glow is the result of workers using thermal lances during clean up. How in the heck is metal hot enough to be molten hanging there and not melting its way down? A little logic please.
originally posted by: Elbereth
originally posted by: neutronflux
a reply to: Elbereth
And where in the article does it discuss molten metal? Molten metal found? The glow is the result of workers using thermal lances during clean up. How in the heck is metal hot enough to be molten hanging there and not melting its way down? A little logic please.
All right. I'm done. We've already gone down this same road on the prior page (33). I don't know what your game is, but you are wasting my time and pissing me off.
originally posted by: Elbereth
a reply to: neutronflux
The article was referenced ONLY to show the source of the image was from a reputable news source (BBC), not because the content of the article was germane to my argument.
"Perhaps the deepest mystery uncovered in the investigation involves extremely thin bits of steel collected from the trade towers and from 7 World Trade Center, a 47-story high rise that also collapsed for unknown reasons. The steel apparently melted away, but no fire in any of the buildings was believed to be hot enough to melt steel outright. A preliminary analysis of the steel at Worcester Polytechnic Institute using electron microscopes suggests that sulfur released during the fires -- no one knows from where -- may have combined with atoms in the steel to form compounds that melt at lower temperatures."
mobile.nytimes.com...
A preliminary analysis of the steel at Worcester Polytechnic Institute using electron microscopes suggests that sulfur released during the fires -- no one knows from where -- may have combined with atoms in the steel to form compounds that melt at lower temperatures.
originally posted by: neutronflux
a reply to: Elbereth
Also, who knows how much pulverized drywall, water / leaching chemical attacks the steel underwent while laying in the hot and steaming pile containing smoldering material waiting for sources of oxygen to reignite.
originally posted by: SecretSector
a reply to: Informer1958
House of cards, is the metaphor I would employ.
Only takes one card to "pull it"...