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[)er Jagermeister
09-07-05, 05:42 AM
Help :damn: :damn: :damn:

I obviously installed 1 too many mods ... My water has turned red ...

Anybody has encountered this problem ???

Thanks

Happy Times
09-07-05, 05:44 AM
Start by listing them. :doh:

kiwi_2005
09-07-05, 05:46 AM
:rotfl: :rotfl: actually could we have a screenshot of the red water.

I would disable one mod at a time until the red water goes away

The Avon Lady
09-07-05, 06:17 AM
This might simply be a global warming algae plume.

Either that or it's the first plague of Egypt. In which case, batton down the hatches before the 2nd one arrives! :huh:

http://www.pondbiz.com/shop/images/CppWF.gif

Alyebard
09-07-05, 06:33 AM
This might simply be a global warming algae plume.

Either that or it's the first plague of Egypt. In which case, batton down the hatches before the 2nd one arrives! :huh:

Waw, YHWH with the Allies, now i understand how germany lost the war.
:rotfl:

(with my apologies if i offended )

Nopileo
09-07-05, 07:52 AM
This might simply be a global warming algae plume.

Speaking of algae - I recently read an article about flourescent marine life (is that the correct term? 'sea creatures that glow in the dark' in layman terms... :P ). Anyway, the article said that one of the last submarines that were sunk during WWI was spotted because it had run though a cloud of fluo... glowing algae, and it was literally lit up like a Xmas tree.

The article also said that the US Navy (or who ever runs the subs) spend millions of dollars each year to counter these glowing buggers.

The article was in a Norwegain magazine I subscribe to called Illustrert Vitenskap (Illustrated Science), so I'm afraid I don't have any links.

Sorry for hijacking the thread, but I figured this might be interesting for some.

jason10mm
09-07-05, 08:39 AM
Interestingly enough, the US Navy spent a LOT of money calibrating satellites to measure those little buggers so they could track subs by their microscopic "wake". They had to send ships all over to get water samples at different depths to make a "map" for the satellites to notice differences.

At least that is what my flow cytometry tech told me, since according to him the first real use of flow was for this purpose. (Flow cytometry is technology for measuring microscopic particles for size and complexity, nowadays we use it to record numbers of cells and various characteristics of those cells).