• @[email protected]
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    784 months ago

    If you just leave it there it’s likely to overcook. Take it out when it’s done and enjoy.

    • @mvirts
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      124 months ago

      Any overcooked item must have been perfectly cooked at one point assuming the item cooks evenly :P

  • @[email protected]
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    314 months ago

    There is this restaurant on a volcano on Lanzarote, in the “Parque Nacional de Timanfaya”, where they cook with the heat from the magma below. I am sure you could cook a pizza with that, as well.

      • @kameecoding
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        94 months ago

        That’s just for gas lightning (the customers into thinking they cook with magma heat)

    • @[email protected]
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      84 months ago

      Yeah, I had the chicken.

      Unfortunatelly, the rest of the kitched was not very good. Just go to Villa Toledo in Costa Teguise.

  • @WoodScientist
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    234 months ago

    There are places on the planet Mercury that, if you were to find a lava tube of sufficient depth, would be the perfect temperature for human habitation. Some of the craters on Mercury’s poles are never exposed to sunlight and actually have ice in them. Most of the planet is of course boiling hot when the Sun is overhead. But there should be some choice areas where you could skirt the balance of the two, and find lava tubes that, with proper sealing, would be quite comfortable for humans to occupy.

  • @Valmond
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    214 months ago

    It’s called a pizza oven!

  • HubertManne
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    174 months ago

    Yeah. There is also likely a position in the earth where its possible to cook a human perfectly by getting them to bring a pizza there.

  • Skua
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    154 months ago

    A pizza oven is about 450 C, so I’ll figure it out based on this graph of the temperature in the Earth by depth.

    0 to 500 C = 80 px
    6.25 C per pixel
    450/6.25 = 72 px
    
    0 to 100 km = 54 px
    1.85 km per pixel
    
    Line y coordinate at 72 px x coordinate = 9 px
    9*1.85 = ~17 km
    

    The deepest hole we’ve ever actually drilled is the Kola superdeep borehole, which is a bit over 12 km deep. This is a fair bit short of our ideal pizza oven temperature, but it did see temperatures of 180 C, which is certainly enough to cook a pizza.

    • @[email protected]
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      154 months ago

      The geothermal gradient is different at different parts of the earth. You can probably bake a pizza at much shallower depths at the mid ocean ridge, near a volcano, or even at an active orogeny.

    • @prime_number_314159
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      14 months ago

      In the area I live, this would mean you could be standing right next to the pizza cooking bore, and still be outside of the delivery range.

    • AlexanderESmith
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      14 months ago

      450 C is 842 F. A pizza oven doesn’t get anywhere near that temperature. That’s half-way to cremation.

      Pizza ovens are usually between 475 and 550 F (246-287C)

      • @adj16
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        4 months ago

        Bro it literally took me 4 seconds to find out that you’re talking out of your ass

  • @[email protected]
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    124 months ago

    Probably, but is that position also accessible to you to put the pizza there in the first place, and be able to get it back out? Because if it isn’t, all you’ve done is sacrifice a perfectly good pizza. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • Zos_Kia
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    84 months ago

    There was also a time when most of the universe was at the perfect temperature and density to cook pizza,I guess.

  • Magiilaro
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    64 months ago

    This is the place where the hidden ancient civilization of P’zz’r lives, a mystical forgotten place deep in the earth

    • @Lost_My_Mind
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      34 months ago

      I’d rather be there, then the lost city of Atlanta.