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

There’s a different-but-similar story (my recollection of the story is quite clear, but not author or title) where Panama is destroyed by nukes (world war, everyone targets Panama for tactical reasons) and the resulting EMP causes mutations in children being born at that moment (preposterous, but there you go)–they all have odd-colored eyes and high IQs. Panama is eventually rebuilt by using nukes to throw up debris to block the blown-out spot.

“Shifting Seas” by Stanley Weinbaum, available at Project Gutenberg (Shifting Seas) - first published in Amazing stories, 1937.

Probably a bunch of stories with that idea - any other details?

Oh yes, it was old stuff when I read it - IIRC the collection also had shorts-wearing astronauts exploring habitable Jovian satellites and so on. That would make it Stanley G. Weinbaum, but I can’t find the story on his list of shorts, so maybe I don’t remember correctly.

ETA - ninjaed! :eek:

By the way, I used Google Books to find “Welling Wall” and then (because it told me the story was in a Weinbaum collection, but not which story it was) I used regular Google to search with the word “Weinbaum” added, until I found what I wanted.

Very nice indeed. Original?

The answer is Ted Turner.

Is there a name for the clap you see in movies but never in real life, where one guy starts with real loud, slow claps, and then it spreads around the room and turns into normal applause?

The flows from the Pacific to the Caribbean would reach equilibrium. If not we could line up generators on the bank and have a source of perpetual energy.

That’s not an argument for equilibrium. You can put a dam and generator on any of thousands of rivers and get a source of perpetual energy.

I have no knowledge of oceanography, but I would guess that under some circumstances there could indeed be a current flowing for as long as the land masses and climate remained stable.

Thanks re golf clap…
Leo