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I had an interesting idea today for an artificial island. Instead of
building up the sea bed, why not build a diamond or carbon nanotube wall that completely encloses an area perhaps 100 square miles or more? The walls would rise up from the ocean floor and extend perhaps a couple hundred feet above sea level. Once the wall is completed, siphon out all of the water within it and you have a dry patch of land to build on. The average depth of Earths oceans is only about 2.5 miles, so there should be plenty of places to do this if we want. Will it work? Is diamond strong enough? |
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Andrew James Alan Welty wrote:
I had an interesting idea today for an artificial island. Instead of building up the sea bed, why not build a diamond or carbon nanotube wall that completely encloses an area perhaps 100 square miles or more? The walls would rise up from the ocean floor and extend perhaps a couple hundred feet above sea level. Once the wall is completed, siphon out all of the water within it and you have a dry patch of land to build on. The average depth of Earths oceans is only about 2.5 miles, so there should be plenty of places to do this if we want. Why does the water need to be pumped out at all? Another option would be to allow water to flow through and just build on the top. This would take more material to close over the top but would also take less for the walls as they wouldn't need to be solid and then you wouldn't need to pump anything out. Which way would be more practical I couldn't say though. So something like a giant oil rig? You wouldn't really need it to have 'walls' at all then, it would make more sense to just use a grid of support columns. There wouldn't be any pressure differential (the water wouldn't be held back) so this shouldn't be a problem. The material to close over the top wouldn't need to be anywhere near as thick as the walls would have been. Definately a cheaper and more practical option. If you really felt the need to reclaim the actual seabed, you could dredge it up and stick it on top, although I suspect that topsoil from some solid ground would be more use. Mike. |
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"Michael Houston" wrote in message
... Andrew James Alan Welty wrote: I had an interesting idea today for an artificial island. Instead of building up the sea bed, why not build a diamond or carbon nanotube wall that completely encloses an area perhaps 100 square miles or more? The walls would rise up from the ocean floor and extend perhaps a couple hundred feet above sea level. Once the wall is completed, siphon out all of the water within it and you have a dry patch of land to build on. The average depth of Earths oceans is only about 2.5 miles, so there should be plenty of places to do this if we want. Why does the water need to be pumped out at all? Another option would be to allow water to flow through and just build on the top. This would take more material to close over the top but would also take less for the walls as they wouldn't need to be solid and then you wouldn't need to pump anything out. Which way would be more practical I couldn't say though. So something like a giant oil rig? You wouldn't really need it to have 'walls' at all then, it would make more sense to just use a grid of support columns. There wouldn't be any pressure differential (the water wouldn't be held back) so this shouldn't be a problem. The material to close over the top wouldn't need to be anywhere near as thick as the walls would have been. Definately a cheaper and more practical option. If you really felt the need to reclaim the actual seabed, you could dredge it up and stick it on top, although I suspect that topsoil from some solid ground would be more use. Why even bother with the support columns? The technology already exists to make a huge reinforced concrete bathtub over a 1km in length, and containing all the fresh water storage you could dream of (fresh water gives added buoyancy), power generation and desalination plants, an artificial harbour and sufficient low-rise housing and parkland for a few thousand people.. ..then again, you could bite the bullet and make it out of steel with a point up one end, add some thrusters at the back and sail the thing around the world under it's own power! (Oh, that's already been done? Darn! ;-) Definitely the future. Cameron:-) |
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"Cameron Dorrough" wrote in message ...
"Michael Houston" wrote in message ... Andrew James Alan Welty wrote: ...snip... So something like a giant oil rig? You wouldn't really need it to have 'walls' at all then, it would make more sense to just use a grid of support columns. There wouldn't be any pressure differential (the water wouldn't be held back) so this shouldn't be a problem. The material to close over the top wouldn't need to be anywhere near as thick as the walls would have been. Definately a cheaper and more practical option. If you really felt the need to reclaim the actual seabed, you could dredge it up and stick it on top, although I suspect that topsoil from some solid ground would be more use. Why even bother with the support columns? The technology already exists to make a huge reinforced concrete bathtub over a 1km in length, and containing all the fresh water storage you could dream of (fresh water gives added buoyancy), power generation and desalination plants, an artificial harbour and sufficient low-rise housing and parkland for a few thousand people.. .then again, you could bite the bullet and make it out of steel with a point up one end, add some thrusters at the back and sail the thing around the world under it's own power! (Oh, that's already been done? Darn! ;-) Definitely the future. Cameron:-) And the past. About 1963, at North American LA Division, I had my space transport team design a floating launch site with submerged "piers" and relatively narrow columns to support the lighter superstructure. The narrow columns minimized wave motion. Ninety percent of the buoyancy came from the submerged piers. These floating piers were modular, cast concrete cylinders. Les Hendrix--conceptual layout boardman supreme and now deceased-- got a big kick out of the approach and used to say we should advertise it as: "Take an island for a cruise." But the huge floating bathtub isn't a bad idea either. General Dynamics considered getting an overage tanker and flooding it with water. It was to be an Atlas sea launch facility. Something that large and massive is also quite stable. Best regards, Len (Cormier) PanAero, Inc. (change x to len) http://www.tour2space.com |
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"Bootstrap Bill" wrote:
I had an interesting idea today for an artificial island. Instead of building up the sea bed, why not build a diamond or carbon nanotube wall that completely encloses an area perhaps 100 square miles or more? The walls would rise up from the ocean floor and extend perhaps a couple hundred feet above sea level. Once the wall is completed, siphon out all of the water within it and you have a dry patch of land to build on. The average depth of Earths oceans is only about 2.5 miles, so there should be plenty of places to do this if we want. Will it work? Is diamond strong enough? Siphoning out all the water would require 2.2 x 10^18 joules of energy. If the wall were to break, the energy released would go into making a gigantic tsumani, something on the order of hundreds to a thousand meters high. Which would utterly annihilate any coastal cities--just imagine a kilometer-high wave coming at Washington D.C. or Los Angeles or Tokyo or Calcutta. The nations of the world would never allow it to be built. |
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