• @[email protected]
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    2 days ago

    This is why setting borders based on rivers is fundamentally flawed.

    This message brought to you by the latitude/longitude gang.

    • @I_Has_A_Hat
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      71 day ago

      The alternative is pretty fucking stupid too. Imagine losing access to your freshwater because the river shifted across an imaginary line. At least when the border is the river, you always have access to the river.

    • Ephera
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      322 days ago

      I mean, you say that now, but if someone stood on the other side of the river and shot arrows at you, would you really disagree with them?

      • Rob Bos
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        72 days ago

        Such a stupid border decision. They should have fixed it in the territory swaps a few years ago.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 days ago

          They should just secede from the union and be a small city state.

          Would it benefit anyone? No. Would it be very costly to make the transition and potentially wreak havoc on the community? Absolutely. But would it create a sense of civic pride and feel good for the residents of Point Roberts? Also no.

        • @someguy3
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          12 days ago

          What territory swaps a few years ago?

          It’s also too late now, even if you come to a political agreement you’d have to buy them out, have to hear about unseating American families, and I doubt Canada is willing to do that. What’s the point for that insignificant land?

          • Rob Bos
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            11 day ago

            A while ago (late 90s?) they straightened the border and reevaluated land along the 49th parallel. Some towns switched countries.

      • @PapaStevesy
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        2 days ago

        Because they change and move over time. This river definitely didn’t start out like this and it almost certainly will look very different in just a few years’ time.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 days ago

          Just recently my country exchanged land with a neighbouring country to adjust for the changes of water, each giving and gaining the same amount of land. When water marks the border it’s much easier to know when you’re crossing it.

          Edit: looked it up: in march we (Austria) traded 239 m² with Liechtenstein

          • @PapaStevesy
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            22 days ago

            Good point, that’s a cool solution too!

            I know they’re rich, but they’re so small, you should have just let them keep it.

    • @Dabundis
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      242 days ago

      Known in Australia as Billabongs

    • @evidences
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      62 days ago

      My first thought when seeing this was future home of an ox bow lake

      • @shalafi
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        62 days ago

        And not far future! Both bends are within a couple of trees in missing each other.

        For those not on the water much, see the beach on the left of the top bow? The opposite side is where the water is deeper and faster. It’ll chew through that bank and meet the other side soon enough.

    • @[email protected]
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      22 days ago

      Holy fuck that oxbow lake schematic on wikipedia looks earily like a vessicle coming of a piece of membrane

      • @hydrospanner
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        22 days ago

        The only thing I know about vesicles is that microvesicles are gross… thanks to paleobotanist Dr. Ellie Sattler.

  • @[email protected]
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    152 days ago

    What’s the hells an oxbow?! Are our bovine friends fashioning weaponry? Someone should tell me, do I need to buy a shield?

    • @PapaStevesy
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      162 days ago

      Oxbow is when a flowing body of water curves out like this over time. Eventually it will redirect to the older, more direct course, leaving an arc of unflowing water called an oxbow lake. This one might have two.

  • @[email protected]
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    102 days ago

    I don’t know much about rivers but based on the floods we had here in Brazil early this year, I don’t think that house will be there by the end of the century.

  • @BlackPenguins
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    52 days ago

    Reminds me of a Wild Thornberrys episode I saw when I was a kid where they fell off a boat and needed to cross a mountain to catch it on the other side.

  • @[email protected]
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    2 days ago

    There was no one by the name Tom Bigbee, it seems.

    source

    The name “Tombigbee” comes from Choctaw “itumbi ikbi“, which means “box maker” or “coffin maker”. There are many stories and legends about how this name came to be. One story is the river was named after a box maker who lived on some of the Tombigbee’s headwaters. Another story is based on the need for box making in the area to ship pelts during the French-dominated fur trade in the 1700’s.

    Umm… Choctaw

    are a Native American people originally based in the Southeastern Woodlands, in what is now Mississippi and Alabama.

  • @Mango
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    42 days ago

    Is it an oxbow or a puppyhammer?