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Posted
14 hours ago, facthunter said:

Not all ores are oxides. Nev

 

I was thinking about Nev's comment and I began to list all the different things that contain oxygen. Things like water and DNA and carbohydrates and proteins and so on. The amount of oxygen in free air is easily calculated, but what about all the other places oxygen hides? Food for thought, if you want a feed.

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Posted
10 minutes ago, facthunter said:

When it's a Compound you can't just squeeze it and get water out.

I agee. The point I am trying to make is that there is much more oxygen present on Earth than the 21% in free air. 

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Posted
Quote

Why don't we heat them to high temperatures here!

Because no-one can produce an economically sound, profitable business case, for doing so, and thereby gain the necessary funding to carry the process out.

 

In addition, Australia has a low level of available suitable labour for major projects such as you propose - and especially, cheap labour.

Posted

Hmm, I'm not sure about that. The Sahara has shrunk by about 8% in the last 20 years due to increased rainfall and greening programmes. In Asia jungles and rainforests have mainly been lost to plantations of oil palms, a lot of that is used to produce biofuel to replace fossil fuels. In South America it is agricultural expansion, logging practices, infrastructure development, and illegal mining. In Australia in the last decade, clearing for wind farms has had a significant impact.

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Posted

Clearing for suburban developments and clearing for minesites and minesite access roads and facilities also takes up a substantial majority of the level of native vegetation clearing going on.

Farmland in W.A. has been subject to highly restrictive clearing bans since 1985. In the 1960's, the catchwords of W.A.'s conservative politicians were, "we're aiming at clearing a million acres a year!".

We've gone from one extreme to the other as regards farm clearing, but there's only minimal restrictions on clearing for roads and subdivisions.

 

 

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Posted

Erosion by wind and water continues to degrade the soil in this country Plus widespread salinity caused by bad Irrigation Methods. Add the effect of rabbits Cane toads and imported Weeds and there's nothing at all to be proud of, here. Our top soils are thin and Low in carbon. Superphospate increases  acidity (lower Ph) and native gums do not like it. Nev.

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Posted

I don't now what quality the Alpine forest is Now because of the too frequent bushfires. There's a lot of Plantation  "Radiata"pine which in treated form is used for a Lot of House frames. America's forest quality leaves ours for dead.  Cedar is all but gone. Silky oak  coachwood, etc also. Pin Oak makes a good timber. A lot was planted in Armadale in NSW I have a few Mature ones here on my block that I planted. They drop a lot of leaves and I am 1500 ft above sea Level. at 36 degrees Lat, so they thrive.  No diseases and they don't drop branches, IF you prune them correctly there's no sign of where the Branch was left in the Bark..  Nev

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Posted
10 minutes ago, facthunter said:

I don't now what quality the Alpine forest is Now because of the too frequent bushfires.

As I said, I drove down to Sydney last week. For most of the way from Mudgee to Mount Victoria in the Blue Mountains the dead trunks of thousands of trees destroyed by bushfires in 2019 stand as ghostly reminders of the ferocity of our bushfires. While most of the damage was done to native forest, there are hectares and hectares of pine tree trunks marking to path of the fires.

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