Lake Eyre in South Australia{ see pics } is a very good natural
"experiment" that tests the Iron Theory cure for global warming
Take note how it is usually a white dry lake in a red desert , that
fills occasionally with red water after rain , then turns green and
explodes into life as algae grow and fish eat the algae until the
water turns blue when all the iron is sucked up and removed via algae
>. fish >. birds >, pelicans , then dry out to a snow white dry lake
in a red desert again , until next rain
Adding iron / old tin cans will not only cure global warming by
removing the carbon from the air as the green algae grows , it will
fed the world ten times over as we eat all the extra fish, like the
millions of pelicans harvest the fish , they remove the iron to grow
millions of baby pelicans , {see pics}, eat the vast numbers of fish
that grow in Lake Eyre when it floods
Check out the links on Lake Eyre floods , spread the word , adding old
tin cans to the sea will cure global warming for free
Water catchment basin feeding Lake Eyre,
http://www.lebmf.gov.au/agreement/images/map.jpg
http://www.lebmf.gov.au/basin/images/map2.jpg
Lake Eyre after 2000 floods , 10,000 sq km inland sea , flooded with
red waters
http://gallery.photo.net/photo/151915-md.jpg
Millions of birds arrive within weeks
http://gallery.photo.net/photo/151915-md.jpg
http://bird.net.au/bird/images/9/92/Lake_Hart.jpg
A million Pelicans must eat something ,
http://www.lcsd.gov.hk/CE/Museum/Space/Programs/Omnimax/Australia/Image/australi\
a_3s.jpg
http://www.epa.qld.gov.au/environment/park/cyberrangers/archives/desert/images/A\
ridflo1.jpg
..
What is turning the lake GREEN ? = algae , what do you suppose the
pelicans are eating , and why are they so attracted to green water if
its bad
..
http://www.wrightsair.com.au/lake%20eyre%20pelicans%2002aug07.jpg
Lake Eyre itself lies 15 metres below sea level, and usually contains
only salt. In flood years it fills and for a short time undergoes an
period of rapid growth and fertility: long-dormant marine creatures
multiply and millions of waterbirds arrive to feed and raise their
young before the waters eva****ate once more.
..
FISH ???
The Barcoo grunter, Scortum barcoo, is a freshwater finfish native to
the Lake Eyre and Bulloo-Bancannia catchments. The natural habitat of
the barcoo grunter includes the low gradient rivers and creeks of the
Lake Eyre Catchment. Waters are generally highly turbid and have a
wide temperature and conductivity range.
..
Jade perch have been re****ted to reach 450 g after 4 months and 800 g
in 7 months from an advanced fingerling size. Maximum densities are
usually about 40-50 kg per cubic metre.,production of 5 to 10 tonnes
per hectare is attainable.
http://www2.dpi.qld.gov.au/fishweb/14076.html
What colour do you think the water is as it floods Lake Eyre ?
http://www.benedictine.org.au/Flooded%20road%20near%20Beltana%202.JPG
Red dust every where , except on Lake Eyre after algae suck up every
molecule of Iron
http://www.verkuil.biz/Pictures/2007Australia/Aus008.jpg
A
Satelite pictures of Lake Eyre , showing algae growth after floods
http://eosweb.larc.nasa.gov/HPDOCS/misr/misr_images/lake_eyre.jpg
Thousands of pelicans arrive soon after floods , notice colour of
water , why after servral months is the lake white again , why is it
not red like all around ? algae ate the iron , every last molecule of
iron = sucked up by algae = eaten by small fish =. eaten by pelicans
, who leave when there are no more fish
http://www.smh.com.au/ffximage/2007/04/08/pelicans9407_wideweb__470x312,0.jpg
..
The various sorts of algae play significant roles in aquatic ecology.
Microscopic forms that live suspended in the water column
(phytoplankton) provide the food base for most marine food chains.
In very high densities (so-called algal blooms) these algae may
discolor the water and outcompete, poison, or asphyxiate other life
forms.
Seaweeds grow mostly in shallow marine waters, however some have been
recorded to a depth of 300 m.[4]Some are used as human food or
harvested for useful substances such as agar, carrageenan, or
fertilizer.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algae
..


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