Draining the North Sea - 1930s project
Discussion
I love nutjob stuff like this. did a bit of searching and it seems to be an idea mostly developed by the magazine itself, instead of "scientists"
We should be thankful that it didn't happen, it would have been busy at night - if they had named it after the historical landmass
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doggerland
Bit more googling and this came up as well: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantropa
very interesting read.

good find OP.
We should be thankful that it didn't happen, it would have been busy at night - if they had named it after the historical landmass

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doggerland
Bit more googling and this came up as well: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantropa
very interesting read.

good find OP.
Ok, maybe i'm being stupid, but what do you do with the rivers that flow "into" the new land mass?
At somepoint the water has to be returned to the sea, so at some point you are going to have to pump al lthat water back up to sea level. Anyone care to work out how much power that would use??
At somepoint the water has to be returned to the sea, so at some point you are going to have to pump al lthat water back up to sea level. Anyone care to work out how much power that would use??
storminnorman said:
I love nutjob stuff like this. did a bit of searching and it seems to be an idea mostly developed by the magazine itself, instead of "scientists"
We should be thankful that it didn't happen, it would have been busy at night - if they had named it after the historical landmass
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doggerland
Bit more googling and this came up as well: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantropa
very interesting read.

good find OP.
That made my morning ritual far more interesting. Thanks for posting. You can get lost in wikipedia if you're not careful. We should be thankful that it didn't happen, it would have been busy at night - if they had named it after the historical landmass

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doggerland
Bit more googling and this came up as well: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantropa
very interesting read.

good find OP.
Max_Torque said:
Ok, maybe i'm being stupid, but what do you do with the rivers that flow "into" the new land mass?
At somepoint the water has to be returned to the sea, so at some point you are going to have to pump al lthat water back up to sea level. Anyone care to work out how much power that would use??
On a slightly related note. Wonder what the evaporation is like for an a large sea that has been cut off? I know the Aral sea has sort of vanished.At somepoint the water has to be returned to the sea, so at some point you are going to have to pump al lthat water back up to sea level. Anyone care to work out how much power that would use??
Max_Torque said:
Ok, maybe i'm being stupid, but what do you do with the rivers that flow "into" the new land mass?
At somepoint the water has to be returned to the sea, so at some point you are going to have to pump al lthat water back up to sea level. Anyone care to work out how much power that would use??
Without bothering to click the link, the idea is that the excess gets desalinated and pumped into the Sahara for irrigation by the looks of the picture. The hydroelectric dams would provide a significant proportion of the energy required to do that. At somepoint the water has to be returned to the sea, so at some point you are going to have to pump al lthat water back up to sea level. Anyone care to work out how much power that would use??
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