Lateral Thinking Puzzles. Let's do it again!

No. Good guesses though.

Were they intended to bridge cracks in the Earth?

Did they need to be perpendicular to the river?

To the fault line?

Were they some sort of early warning system?

Yes!!!

I think this is solved. During the New Madrid earthquakes in 1811-1812 the ground in SE Missouri (Moe:)) and surrounding area was in constant flux. Fissures were opening up all the time and people noticed they opened up running North/South. So the idea was to cut down a lot of large trees to fall east/west so if a fissure did open there would be something to hold on to and/or bridge gaps. See here and here

Cool! Does this mean I have to do the next one? I did not come prepared.

I can try one. This one should be relatively quick:

Ida had some soup and then she died. Why?

Is the name Ida relevant?

What decade and century is this(to save time)?

Is the soup connected to her death?

Is there any wordplay in this puzzle at all?

Is she human?

Did she drown in the soup?

Ida had some soup and then she died. Why?

Is Ida short for anything?

Is this situation famous?

Is Ida famous?

Ida is not an Ore-Ida potato? (she’s human you said)

This seems to obvious, but was the soup poisoned?
Did she eat the soup or does “had some soup” mean it was just in her possession?
Did she die as a direct result of eating the soup or were there other steps involved?
Was she murdered?
Did she commit suicide?
Did she die as the result of a medical condition?
Was her death accidental?

Ida had some soup and then she died. Why?

Are ‘Ida’ and the ‘she’ the same person?

Did she intentionally consume it by putting it in her mouth and swallowing it?
Did she ingest it another way, such as through a feeding tube?
Did she introduce it to her body in some non-traditional and dangerous way such as inhaling it, injecting it, or giving herself a soup enema (ew)?

Did she have a physical issue that made eating soup (in the traditional way) dangerous, such as inability to swallow thin liquids?
Did she have an allergy or intolerance to some ingredient in the soup?
Did she have a mental illness that is relevant to the story?

Is the soup itself relevant to the story? The ingredients in the soup? The temperature of the soup? The consistency of the soup? Or could soup be replaced with a different food altogether and the story would still make sense?

So “Ida” is relevant- is “Ida” a specific real person or is it a pun (First name Ida, last name Worstateatingsoup)? Is the puzzle solvable without figuring out the relevance of “Ida” (like “Moe” in the previous one was a clever detail, but the answer would have been the same if he had been named Kevin)?

Ida had some soup and then she died. Why?

The riddle’s almost solved by now, maybe there’s the specific circumstances left…

I don’t get it.

Never mind, figured it out, (counter-intuitive US state postal abbreviation)

Since there’s no more interest, here’s the full story:

Ilda Vitor Maciel, 88, Dies After Allegedly Being Injected With Soup

I got the name wrong. Sorry about that.

Wrong bisque type?

Well injecting soup would certainly do someone some serious harm. Some kind of bizarre medical error?

Edit: whoops, didn’t see the last few posts. Easy to guess at the answer after the answer has been posted

**Jay got together with his Dad the other day, but it was a rather strange meeting in a few ways. What was so strange about it?
**