What would happen if we broke the land link between the Americas?

Thanks for all the input everyone.

On another note, would this actually work? Assuming cost is no issue, is there actually enough material in Panama to do it?

Also I still haven’t seen a figure for how long it would take the Med to dry. It’s dried and refilled at least several times in the past, I assume that would give some indication.

So the Aussies are to blame, eh? They’re not going to like that, mate.

Yeah, it would, because it already happened only 6 million years ago:

Easily, especially if all you want to do is build a dike across it. The Strait of Gibraltar is less than 10 miles across, while Panama is 50 miles across at its narrowest point. The shallowest point is only about 1000 ft deep, while the highest peak in Panama is over 11,000 feet. So there’s enough material in Panama to fill up the Strait of Gibraltar many times over, even when you just consider the part of Panama above sea level.

Harry Turtledove wrote a story (“Down in the Bottomlands”) in which the Mediterranean remained dry to the present-day (existing as a huge “Death Valley”-like area with a few very salty seas, and unique lifeforms).

Julian May has a novel in which the opening of the straits is an important plot point.

I myself only brought it up and knew of it because it’s also featured in Stephen Baxter’s novel Evolution.

:smiley: Excellent.

BTW, what does “golf clap” mean? I’ve seen lt all over this board…I wanna be part of the in crowd too, y’know.

I read that… has to have been 1984 or earlier as I remember where I was living at the time. That was “seriously drop” as in “Britain becomes marginally habitable, to the extent of begging the USA to take in millions of refugees”. Then the States sorted it out with a big-ass dam to fill in the gap and restore the Gulf Stream, but kept a fleet of bombers on standby in case the dam should need blowing up again - so those pesky Euros would know to play nice, you hear me? I forget who wrote it.

If Nukes, then: “A man, a plan, no TNT, and no Panama, either!”

Even if there was no Gulf Stream, why would Britain become “marginally habitable”? Canadians seem to manage OK with a city of a million-plus (Edmonton) at a similar latitude to northern England. And even without the Gulf Stream, the Atlantic would modify the climate to some extent so it should be less harsh than the continental extremes.

Hasn’t Britain already sent “millions of refugees” to North America? And I’ve heard plenty of complaints about the habitability of the English climate. :wink:

Allow me to direct you to this thread. Thankfully, the scary realm below 0ºF remains unknown to most Brits. It may not always be pleasant, but at least we rarely risk death by flash-freezing if the door locks behind us. :slight_smile:

Much earlier. IIRC, it was from the 1940s (It mentioned the “Ring of Fire”, but was unaware of Continental Drift). Can’t recall who wrote it, though.

Common internet meme.

Didn’t “golf clap” start in TV, though? I seem to remember it figuring in a SNL sketch or something. It’s referring to the restrained, polite applause you usually see employed after a particularly nice drive or put while watching a live golf game. Polite and restrained, you see, to avoid distracting the golfers on other holes. It’s evolved into a meme as a way of giving rather snooty props to someone for something clever.

Holy cats! No idea it came from the Emilio Estevez/Charlie Sheen movie Men at Work though. Huh.

Underrated little movie, that was.

Mad props to Colophon.

Great. Now we have to sink Australia. Just to be sure.

I seem to remember a short sf story of a civilization in the Mediterranean basin destroyed during the zanclean flood with refugees escaping by boat.

The story strongly hints at being the basis for the ancient myths of Atlantis and Noah’s Ark.

I came into this thread to mention / attempt to recall the same story. I’m all but certain that it was either in Asimov’s or Analog. I seem to recall that the big-ass dam was called the “Welling Wall.” Off to see if Google can figure out what I’m thinking of…

Nope, nothing.