What is the sturdiest mankind has built that can withstand mother nature?

Zeze

Lifer
Mar 4, 2011
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Inspired from this video of a hurricane tossing around 18 wheelers like toys:

Does our biggest carrier withstand full blown storms? How about cruise liners? I know they always avoid storms with radar, but are they capable?

How about things we built on land? Anything can withstand EQ?
 
Oct 25, 2006
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Probably Japanese architecture. They make some insane stuff.

Its either that or the great wall of china
 

manimal

Lifer
Mar 30, 2007
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single packaged string cheese. How the hell am I supposed to open those thing.s
 

brainhulk

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2007
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Probably Japanese architecture. They make some insane stuff.

What-The-Hell-Is-That-Arch-Made-Of_c_100647.jpg
 
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Ns1

No Lifer
Jun 17, 2001
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some of those old light towers are pretty ridiculous.
 

zanejohnson

Diamond Member
Nov 29, 2002
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they say the great pyramid in guiza, has a footprint of like 8 city blocks, and is completely, level, to this day, to the cm, not to mention, exactly as wide as it is long, to the mm.
 

zanejohnson

Diamond Member
Nov 29, 2002
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i think they used those pyramids, to store/harness electromagnetic energy...


like a giant battery.
 

zanejohnson

Diamond Member
Nov 29, 2002
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yes, i've read that too. quite fascinating.

it really is, i read somewhere about how our vision of those times is probably so jaded...

like if today, we were to get wiped off the earth by some catastrophic event, people in the future would probably be like "and here we see the great golden arches, where the people of the past worshipped there god, ronald mcdonald" "there was many churches in every town.."
 

brainhulk

Diamond Member
Sep 14, 2007
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I watched this documentary on the construction of bridge between an island and mainland japan. They had to engineer it to withstand typhoon force winds which are the bane of bridge engineers.

I think it took over 30 years from r&d to completion and is the longest bridge in the world

An earthquake occured during the middle of construction which moved one of the support bases laterally by a large margin. Since it was designed down to the nearest mm, they basically had to go back to the drawing board.

Amazing
 
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