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Originally posted by H1ght3chHippie
And you are going to irrigate your fields with what ... salt water ?
Try looking up the Salton Sea .. people tried before to create an arificial sea and guess what happened. That thing stinks so bad you can not even go near it.
Originally posted by H1ght3chHippie
The Problem is not with the water that flows towards the artificial sea, but with the stagnating water inside the sea.
Once the sea is filled you will not have sufficient fresh water and water movement.
The desert is so hot that you have huge amounts of evaporation, upto a point where the salt concentration inside the sea will kill off any marine life.
Originally posted by 74Templar
reply to post by H1ght3chHippie
I'd have to agree, some of the central plains and lakes and dams in outback Aust are up to seven times saltier than the ocean. In Kalgoorlie they use ground water for the mines that is worse than the oceans for salt content.
It is a good idea though, very remeniscent of the US west coast. Most of California was desert before it was settled, and they have turned a lot of it into farmland. We could do the same, but for the moment our population is too small and our infrastructure doesn't need the extra farming and living areas, which would cost more than they would make most likely.
Maybe in 50 years time or so when we have close to 50-60 million people or more, it may become a viable option, and water purification tech becomes more mainstream, then definetely, you're onto something.
Originally posted by 74Templar
reply to post by CrimsonKapital
Given the fact we are currently in a flood state though after a ten year drought, water is not our current problem. As we go through these stages of drought then flood, we just need to be smart with our water. The de-sal plants were the biggest waste of time and money IMO, we could have used them to desalinate the water in central Aust rather than ruin the coastal areas and kill off all the marine life.
I don't know if central Aust could ever be terraformed to a point of being habitable, it is very arid and not a nice place to live if you don't have to even if you have the water and cities.
The other main problem is the large amount of gas, oil and mineral wealth in central Aust. Of course it won't last forever, but at the moment the mining boom is about the only thing keeping the country going. At some point it will have to come down to a point of residential vs. industrial. When I was in Kalgoorlie last, there was talk of relocating one entire edge of the city to expand the Superpit mine for gold exploration. If there's enough money in it, my guess would be with the relocation, to keep the industry going.