by JohnD » Mon Dec 15, 2014 10:49 am
"Many bumps and valleys on the Potsdam Gravity Potato can be attributed to surface features, such as the North Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Himalayan Mountains, but others cannot, and so might relate to unusually high or low sub-surface densities."
You can say that again! The blurb writer seems to have misspoke (polite for saying made a complete ass (ass=donkey!) of themselves!), as this interpretation is at odds with the model. Yes, the North Atlantic Ridge is a high gravity area, but not the South, and the 'Line of Fire' along the west coast of America is a high gravity area, in South America, not North. In Africa, high/low gravity seems to bear no relationship to geography, even of the Great Africa Rift Valley, and in Asia the Himalayas are a distinctly ordinary gravity area!
John
"[i]Many bumps and valleys on the Potsdam Gravity Potato can be attributed to surface features, such as the North Mid-Atlantic Ridge and the Himalayan Mountains, but others cannot, and so might relate to unusually high or low sub-surface densities[/i]."
You can say that again! The blurb writer seems to have misspoke [color=#FF0000][s](polite for saying made a complete ass (ass=donkey!) of themselves!)[/s][/color], as this interpretation is at odds with the model. Yes, the North Atlantic Ridge is a high gravity area, but not the South, and the 'Line of Fire' along the west coast of America is a high gravity area, in South America, not North. In Africa, high/low gravity seems to bear no relationship to geography, even of the Great Africa Rift Valley, and in Asia the Himalayas are a distinctly ordinary gravity area!
John