This going off will make anyone’s eyes water. :eek:
And maybe it’s as much as 6 KT. :eek:
I think I’d like to be on the other side of a big hill.
This going off will make anyone’s eyes water. :eek:
And maybe it’s as much as 6 KT. :eek:
I think I’d like to be on the other side of a big hill.
Next on Mythbusters…
Just one more example of how government over regulation is keeping good businesses down!
Down on the ground instead of up in the sky, in this case…
[QUOTE=]
Just outside the evacuation area, Doyline High School teacher Linda Watson stopped Monday to buy chicken strips at D&H Hardware, which has a small kitchen serving fare that also includes burgers.
[/quote]
Well if the grocery stores now have pharmacy depts & the drug stores now sell food it only seems logical that Home Despot starts restaurant service. But how is this sentence relevant to the article?
The Home Depot by me has a hot dog stand in the entry way where the shopping carts are.
A note.
When you start taking about thousands of tons of explosives, you are talking about the explosive force levels that early atomic bombs had (or what terrorist these days would likely be able to cobble together if they could get get their hands on enough uranium or plutonium).
Way back when Galveston Texas got blown the fuck up good when a ship carring thousands of tons of fertilizer caught fire then eventually blew up.
It’s not explosives, it’s propellant for artillery. It won’t go boom unless in a contained space. In the open it would burn like hell but there wouldn’t be an Earth shattering ka-boom.
Or at least that’s what my passing knowledge of such things tells me.
Or when an ammunition ship exploded in Halifax harbour.
If it is a propellant, then it shouldn’t explode unless confined. Still, 6kt of propellant going up would be one amazing-ass out of control fire that I’d pay money to see.
Looks furtively around
How much?