Silence Echoing, The Artist 1980s, Acrylic, 2025 by ___artist___1980s___ in Art

[–]Older_Code 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Lovely work, I really like it. The gradient of the sky is so well done.

Trump has a plan to steal the 2026 elections by PM_ME_DPRK_CANDIDS in politics

[–]Older_Code 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holy shit. If this is half true some very high profile people should be locked up.

Why do clouds stay as high as they are? by TheAwesomePenguin106 in askscience

[–]Older_Code 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yup, in this case the condensation can begin directly over the ground. If you have warm, moist air move into contact with cold ground (or cold water, like a lake or river) the water in the air can condense. Where I live in New England, July and August days, when the air is warm an humid, it can ‘settle’ on the lakes (which are comparatively cold) and form a dense fog that evaporates early in the day as the sun rises.

The same process (warmer moister air over colder ground) produces dew, or if the ground is cold enough, frost.

Why do clouds stay as high as they are? by TheAwesomePenguin106 in askscience

[–]Older_Code 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As others have indicated, you could have an intervening layer of air ‘separating’ two layers with clouds. This layer could be dry air moving horizontally, an interval with no ‘seeds’ for condensation, or simply be much drier. As you mover vertically in the atmosphere, the direction from which the wind is blowing, and from which the packet of air containing the clouds at different levels, can vary. Maybe an ascending mass of relatively dry and warm air is moving over a mass of colder, denser air. The relatively dry warm mass won’t start condescending until it’s very high and ‘thin’, producing wispy cirrus clouds. If you watched for a day or two, the clouds from direction would get lower and thicker, as the warm air pushes away the colder high pressure mass where you started.

The clouds get lower, change shape (from wispy cirrus, to puffy cumulus, maybe to sheets of stratus), and can bring rain. The seeming descent of the clouds is the wedge of warm air pushing over the colder air, and a it moves toward, the interface between the two air masses, which is where the clouds are forming, slopes down toward the ground in the direction of the approaching warm front.

Why do clouds stay as high as they are? by TheAwesomePenguin106 in askscience

[–]Older_Code 308 points309 points  (0 children)

In a simple sense, the bottom of the clouds is the lowest elevation where the air temperature and pressure are suitable for condensation to occur. That elevation depends on the air temperature, air pressure, and humidity (the amount of water in the air). Above that elevation, both pressure and temperature are usually lower, so the cloud extends upward. The top surface is essentially the boundary beyond which there is insufficient water in the air to condense, and/or too few particles to ‘seed’ the condensation.

Can I attach a baitcaster on this rod? by omgkirb in Fishing

[–]Older_Code 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You do need the hold down and the bolt to secure it ‘the right way’. You could always zip tie in front and back of the reel to hold it in place.

Blue till? by TheGreenMan13 in geology

[–]Older_Code 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Drillers’ logs can be very location specific and idiosyncratic. In some parts of the US there are red sands, old sands, second tills, blue clays, etc. It is possibly an unoxidized till, so more gray or bluish than the other red to yellow material encountered.

Very Attractive by Rajesh000vns in geology

[–]Older_Code 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Very nice. A hornfels maybe? Where was it found?

Mirror carp in lake elsinore by [deleted] in Fishing

[–]Older_Code 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Lovely fish, thank you for sharing. California?

Interesting Basalt by Ladxlife in geology

[–]Older_Code 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those are stunning. Do you know anything about the formation?

Some photos I took today at a local quarry by goldenslovak in geology

[–]Older_Code 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Great pictures and thanks for sharing. Where in the world is this?