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Thread: A question

  1. #1
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    Default A question

    While preparing a presentation on plate tectonics for my lovely HS freshmen, I noted that the Appalachians do not end in Maine, or even Canada. They continue through Britain and Scandinavia, with bits in Portugal and Morocco. So, After hiking 2000 + miles, are you really done, or just off to a good start? Opinions please.
    "It's fun to have fun, but you have to know how." ---Dr. Seuss

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    Quote Originally Posted by Feral Bill View Post
    While preparing a presentation on plate tectonics for my lovely HS freshmen, I noted that the Appalachians do not end in Maine, or even Canada. They continue through Britain and Scandinavia, with bits in Portugal and Morocco. So, After hiking 2000 + miles, are you really done, or just off to a good start? Opinions please.
    Check this out: http://iat-sia.org/index.php

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    Registered User Hot Flash's Avatar
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    Go hike the whole thing then. The International Appalachian Trail does exist.
    Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day; teach a man to fish and he will eat for a lifetime; give a man religion and he will die praying for a fish.

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    It is what it is at the time you complete it for there is a reason it exist as it does at that time.

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    Registered User 4eyedbuzzard's Avatar
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    Lots of interesting geologic history. There are three somewhat recent events, The Taconic, Acadian, and Allegany/Appalachian orogenies in what is now the US and Canada that geologists all seem to agree on, but then there are the Caledonian and Hersynian orogenies in Europe that may be part of one of those first rounds of mountain building. Add in perhaps the even older rounds of mountain building during the Grenville event. And other hypothesis that there may be links to the Andes and even the Shackleton Range in Antarctica.

    Forget the Kennebec - you might have to ford the Tierra Del Fuego and North Atlantic to hike the whole thing.

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    Registered User Tuckahoe's Avatar
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    Geologically they may be the same, but from the prespective of a historian I can't help but to think that climate and culture make them different as well.
    igne et ferrum est potentas
    "In the beginning, all America was Virginia." -​William Byrd

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    Registered User Teacher & Snacktime's Avatar
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    It's tough to get that ferry guy to cross the Pond.....
    "Maybe life isn't about avoiding the bruises. Maybe it's about collecting the scars to prove we showed up for it."

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    Registered User LIhikers's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Teacher & Snacktime View Post
    It's tough to get that ferry guy to cross the Pond.....
    He'd have to add outriggers to the canoe

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    Hillbilly Dave would probably be game to do it though.

  10. #10
    Getting out as much as I can..which is never enough. :) Mags's Avatar
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    I prefer to think of them an extension of the Atlas mountains instead.

    So the real question is, after you are done hiking the Atlas mountains, are you ready to head west to the New World????
    Paul "Mags" Magnanti
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    The true harvest of my life is intangible...a little stardust caught,a portion of the rainbow I have clutched -Thoreau

  11. #11

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    Quote Originally Posted by Feral Bill View Post
    While preparing a presentation on plate tectonics for my lovely HS freshmen, I noted that the Appalachians do not end in Maine, or even Canada. They continue through Britain and Scandinavia, with bits in Portugal and Morocco. So, After hiking 2000 + miles, are you really done, or just off to a good start? Opinions please.
    off to a good start, geographic lines mean little to a Mountain, geology is his family and friends.

  12. #12
    Registered User moytoy's Avatar
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    "Off to a good start", irregardless how the plate tectonics work.
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