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Meteorite Collision



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 25th 06, 02:31 AM posted to alt.astronomy
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Default Meteorite Collision

Meteorite Collision

Cool Link
http://www.ursispaltenstein.ch/blog/...ite_collision/

  #2  
Old June 25th 06, 01:34 PM posted to alt.astronomy
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Default Meteorite Collision

Nice try, WartHole! Looks like another Japanese animated monster
movie. The animation doesn't even match the translated description!

What are the Japs at the end jumping up and down about? The home
islands were CRUSHED!

Saul Levy


On 24 Jun 2006 18:31:20 -0700, "Warhol" wrote:

Meteorite Collision

Cool Link
http://www.ursispaltenstein.ch/blog/...ite_collision/

  #3  
Old June 26th 06, 12:44 AM posted to alt.astronomy
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Default Meteorite Collision

YAWN, FEK OFF.. why, you can't suck it anyway, half wit,. they said
when jumping up and down. They will do anything for attention from
their masters. IT REALLY GRINDS THE JAPS TO KNOW THAT THEIR MASTERS
IGNORE THEM.


I can't help it - Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha While I find very little to agree with
you, I thought you could do far better than this.

BRING ON THE WENCHES! WHADDYA EXPECT IMA PIE'RAT

TAR DE HAR HAR THAR

The Moon
I had the ambition to not only go farther than man had gone before, but
to go as far as it was possible to go. - Captain Cook

Spacecraft Mission
Educator's Guide to Eclipses
Educator's Guide to Moon Phases
Moon Image & Animation Gallery
Native American Indian Lunar Calendar

Additional Resources
Clementine Lunar Images & Information
NASA-JSC Digital Image Collection
Lunar Rover Initiative

Apollo Mission Publications
Apollo: Expeditions to the Moon
Chariots for Apollo: A History of Manned Lunar Spacecraft
The First Lunar Landing: As Told By The Astronauts
Where No Man Has Gone Befo A History of Apollo Lunar Exploration
Missions

Apollo Lunar Surface Journal
Prologue
Spacecraft, Suits, and Rovers
Precursors to the Landing Missions
Apollo 11, Apollo 12, Apollo 13, Apollo 14, Apollo 15, Apollo 16,
Apollo 17
Epilogue: When might we go back to the Moon?



The Moon has fascinated mankind throughout the ages. By simply viewing
with the naked eye, one can discern two major types of terrain:
relatively bright highlands and darker plains. By the middle of the
17th century, Galileo and other early astronomers made telescopic
observations, noting an almost endless overlapping of craters. It has
also been known for more than a century that the Moon is less dense
than the Earth. Although a certain amount of information was
ascertained about the Moon before the space age, this new era has
revealed many secrets barely imaginable before that time. Current
knowledge of the Moon is greater than for any other solar system object
except Earth. This lends to a greater understanding of geologic
processes and further appreciation of the complexity of terrestrial
planets.
On July 20, 1969, Neil Armstrong became the first man to step onto the
surface of the Moon. He was followed by Edwin Aldrin, both of the
Apollo 11 mission. They and other moon walkers experienced the effects
of no atmosphere. Radio communications were used because sound waves
can only be heard by travelling through the medium of air. The lunar
sky is always black because diffraction of light requires an
atmosphere. The astronauts also experienced gravitational differences.
The moon's gravity is one-sixth that of the Earth's; a man who weighs
180 lbf (pound-force) on Earth weighs only 30 lbf on the Moon. (The
equivalent metric weight (or force) is the Newton, where 4.45 Newtons
equal one pound-force.)

The Moon is 384,403 kilometers (238,857 miles) distant from the Earth.
Its diameter is 3,476 kilometers (2,160 miles). Both the rotation of
the Moon and its revolution around Earth takes 27 days, 7 hours, and 43
minutes. This synchronous rotation is caused by an unsymmetrical
distribution of mass in the Moon, which has allowed Earth's gravity to
keep one lunar hemisphere permanently turned toward Earth. Optical
librations have been observed telescopically since the mid-17th
century. Very small but real librations (maximum about 0°.04) are
caused by the effect of the Sun's gravity and the eccentricity of
Earth's orbit, perturbing the Moon's orbit and allowing cyclical
preponderances of torque in both east-west and north-south directions.

Four nuclear powered seismic stations were installed during the Apollo
project to collect seismic data about the interior of the Moon. There
is only residual tectonic activity due to cooling and tidal forcing,
but other moonquakes have been caused by meteor impacts and artificial
means, such as deliberately crashing the Lunar Module into the moon.
The results have shown the Moon to have a crust 60 kilometers (37
miles) thick at the center of the near side. If this crust is uniform
over the Moon, it would constitute about 10% of the Moon's volume as
compared to the less than 1% on Earth. The seismic determinations of a
crust and mantle on the Moon indicate a layered planet with
differentiation by igneous processes. There is no evidence for an
iron-rich core unless it were a small one. Seismic information has
influenced theories about the formation and evolution of the Moon.

The Moon was heavily bombarded early in its history, which caused many
of the original rocks of the ancient crust to be thoroughly mixed,
melted, buried, or obliterated. Meteoritic impacts brought a variety of
"exotic" rocks to the Moon so that samples obtained from only 9
locations produced many different rock types for study. The impacts
also exposed Moon rocks of great depth and distributed their fragments
laterally away from their places of origin, making them more
accessible. The underlying crust was also thinned and cracked, allowing
molten basalt from the interior to reach the surface. Because the Moon
has neither an atmosphere nor any water, the components in the soils do
not weather chemically as they would on Earth. Rocks more than 4
billion years old still exist there, yielding information about the
early history of the solar system that is unavailable on Earth.
Geological activity on the Moon consists of occasional large impacts
and the continued formation of the regolith. It is thus considered
geologically dead. With such an active early history of bombardment and
a relatively abrupt end of heavy impact activity, the Moon is
considered fossilized in time.


The Lunar Interior
This picture shows the 3 major divisions of the Lunar interior, the
crust, mantle, and core. The lunar crust thickness varies from tens of
kilometers in depth (under mare basins) to more than 100 kilometers in
some highland regions, with an average thickness of about 70
kilometers. The core radius is between 300 and 425 kilometers.
(Copyright 1999 Calvin J. Hamilton)

2004 Lunar Eclipse
On Wednesday October 27, 2004 the moon passed into Earth's shadow for
more than three hours. It began at 9:14 p.m EST with totality beginning
at 10:23 p.m. and ending at 11:45 p.m. The eclipse passed out of Earth
shadow at 00:54 a.m (Oct. 28). (Copyright Calvin J. Hamilton)

Apollo 17 - Whole Moon View
This full disc of the Moon was photographed by the Apollo 17 crew
during their trans-Earth coast homeward following a successful lunar
landing mission in December 1972. Mare seen on this photo include
Serentatis, Tranquillitatis, Nectaris, Foecunditatis and Crisium.
(Courtesy NASA)

Moon - False Color Mosaic
This false-color photograph of the Moon was taken by the Galileo
spacecraft on December 8, 1992. The false-color processing used to
create this lunar image is helpful for interpreting the surface soil
composition. Areas appearing red generally correspond to the lunar
highlands, while blue to orange shades indicate the ancient volcanic
lava flow of a mare, or lunar sea. Bluer mare areas contain more
titanium than do the orange regions. Mare Tranquillitatis, seen as a
deep blue patch on the right, is richer in titanium than Mare
Serenitatis, a slightly smaller circular area immediately adjacent to
the upper left of Mare Tranquillitatis. Blue and orange areas covering
much of the left side of the Moon in this view represent many separate
lava flows in Oceanus Procellarum. The small purple areas found near
the center are pyroclastic deposits formed by explosive volcanic
eruptions. The fresh crater Tycho, with a diameter of 85 kilometers (53
miles), is prominent at the bottom of the photograph.


Apollo 17 - Orange Soil
These orange glass spheres and fragments are the finest particles ever
brought back from the Moon. The particles range in size from 20 to 45
microns. The orange soil was brought back from the Taurus-Littrow
landing site by the apollo 17 crewmen. Scientist-Astronaut Harrison J.
Schmitt discovered the orange soil at Shorty Crater. The orange
particles, which are intermixed with black and black-speckled grains,
are about the same size as the particles that compose silt on Earth.
Chemical analysis of the orange soil material has show the sample to be
similar to some of the samples brought back from the Apollo 11 (Sea of
Tranquility) site several hundred miles to the southwest. Like those
samples, it is rich in titanium (8%) and iron oxide (22%). But unlike
the Apollo 11 samples, the orange soil is unexplainably rich in zinc.
The orange soil is probably of volcanic origin and not the product of
meteorite impact. (Courtesy NASA)

Limb of Copernicus Impact Crater
This image of Copernicus was acquired on the Lunar Orbiter 5 Mission.
Copernicus is 93 kilometers wide and is located within the Mare Imbrium
Basin, northern nearside of the Moon (10° N, 20° degrees W.). Image
shows crater floor, floor mounds, rim, and rayed ejecta. Rays from the
ejecta are superposed on all other surrounding terrains which places
the crater in its namesake age group: the Copernican system,
established as the youngest assemblage of rocks on the Moon (Shoemaker
and Hackman, 1962, The Moon: London, Academic Press, p.289-300).
(Courtesy USGS/NASA)

Apollo 17 - Oblique view of Copernicus
This is an oblique view of the large crater Copernicus on the lunar
nearside, as phtographed from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in lunar orbit.
(Courtesy NASA)

Moon Statistics
Mass (kg) 7.349e+22
Mass (Earth = 1) 1.2298e-02
Equatorial radius (km) 1,737.4
Equatorial radius (Earth = 1) 2.7241e-01
Mean density (gm/cm^3) 3.34
Mean distance from Earth (km) 384,400
Rotational period (days) 27.32166
Orbital period (days) 27.32166
Average length of lunar day (days) 29.53059
Mean orbital velocity (km/sec) 1.03
Orbital eccentricity 0.0549
Tilt of axis (degrees) 1.5424
Orbital inclination (degrees) 5.1454
Equatorial surface gravity (m/sec^2) 1.62
Equatorial escape velocity (km/sec) 2.38
Visual geometric albedo 0.12
Magnitude (Vo) -12.74
Mean surface temperature (day) 107°C
Mean surface temperature (night) -153°C
Maximum surface temperature 123°C
Minimum surface temperature -233°C


Moon Animations




Rotating Moon Animation.
Moon Topography Animation.
Lunar Phase Animation.
Galileo Moon Encounter.
A dramatic view of the moon with Venus in the distance.
Clementine images showing the Apollo 16 lunar landing site.
Astronauts walking near lunar lander and US flag.
Views of the Moon



The Lunar Interior
This picture shows the 3 major divisions of the Lunar interior, the
crust, mantle, and core. The lunar crust thickness varies from tens of
kilometers in depth (under mare basins) to more than 100 kilometers in
some highland regions, with an average thickness of about 70
kilometers. The core radius is between 300 and 425 kilometers.
(Copyright 1999 Calvin J. Hamilton)

2004 Lunar Eclipse
On Wednesday October 27, 2004 the moon passed into Earth's shadow for
more than three hours. It began at 9:14 p.m EST with totality beginning
at 10:23 p.m. and ending at 11:45 p.m. The eclipse passed out of Earth
shadow at 00:54 a.m (Oct. 28). (Copyright Calvin J. Hamilton)

Apollo 17 - Whole Moon View
This full disc of the Moon was photographed by the Apollo 17 crew
during their trans-Earth coast homeward following a successful lunar
landing mission in December 1972. Mare seen on this photo include
Serentatis, Tranquillitatis, Nectaris, Foecunditatis and Crisium.
(Courtesy NASA)

Moon - False Color Mosaic
This false-color photograph of the Moon was taken by the Galileo
spacecraft on December 8, 1992. The false-color processing used to
create this lunar image is helpful for interpreting the surface soil
composition. Areas appearing red generally correspond to the lunar
highlands, while blue to orange shades indicate the ancient volcanic
lava flow of a mare, or lunar sea. Bluer mare areas contain more
titanium than do the orange regions. Mare Tranquillitatis, seen as a
deep blue patch on the right, is richer in titanium than Mare
Serenitatis, a slightly smaller circular area immediately adjacent to
the upper left of Mare Tranquillitatis. Blue and orange areas covering
much of the left side of the Moon in this view represent many separate
lava flows in Oceanus Procellarum. The small purple areas found near
the center are pyroclastic deposits formed by explosive volcanic
eruptions. The fresh crater Tycho, with a diameter of 85 kilometers (53
miles), is prominent at the bottom of the photograph.

Far Side of the Moon
This image was taken by Apollo 11 astronauts in 1969. It shows a
portion of the Moon's heavily cratered far side. The large crater is
approximately 80 km ( 50 miles ) in diameter. The rugged terrain seen
here is typical of the farside of the Moon. (Courtesy NASA)

Lunar South Pole
This mosaic is composed of 1,500 Clementine images of the south polar
region of the Moon. The top half of the mosaic faces Earth. Clementine
has revealed what appears to be a major depression near the lunar south
pole (center), evident from the presence of extensive shadows around
the pole. This depression probably is an ancient basin formed by the
impact of an asteroid or comet. A significant portion of the dark area
near the pole may be in permanent shadow, and sufficiently cold to trap
water of cometary origin in the form of ice.

The impact basin Schrodinger (near the 4 o'clock position) is a
two-ring basin, about 320 kilometers (200 miles) in diameter which is
recognized to be the second youngest impact basin on the Moon. The
center of Schrodinger is flooded by lavas. A volcanic vent seen in the
floor of Schrodinger is one of the largest single explosive volcanoes
on the Moon. (Courtesy Naval Research Laboratory.)

Apollo 11
The Apollo 11 Lunar Module (LM) ascent stage, with Astronauts Neil A.
Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. aboard, is photographed from the
Command and Service Module (CSM) during rendezvous in lunar orbit. The
LM was making its docking approach to the CSM. Astronaut Michael
Collins remained with the CSM in lunar orbit while the other two
crewmen explored the lunar surface. The large, dark-colored area in the
background is Smyth's Sea, centered at 85 degrees east longitude and 2
degrees south latitude on the lunar surface (nearside). This view looks
west. The Earth rises above the lunar horizon. (Courtesy NASA)

Apollo 11 - Flag
Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., lunar module pilot, poses for a
photograph beside the deployed United States flag during Apollo 11
extravehicular activity on the lunar surface. The Lunar Module Eagle is
on the left. The footprints of the astronauts are clearly visible in
the soil of the Moon. This picture was taken by Astronaut Neil A.
Armstrong, commander, with a 70mm lunar surface camera. (Courtesy NASA)

Apollo 11 - Earth from the Moon
This view of the Earth rising over the Moon's horizon was taken from
the Apollo 11 spacecraft. The lunar terrain pictured is in the area of
Smyth's Sea on the nearside. (Courtesy NASA)

Apollo 11 - Footprint on the Moon
A close-up view of an astronaut's footprint in the lunar soil,
photographed with a 70mm lunar surface camera during the Apollo 11
extravehicular activity (EVA) on the Moon.

Apollo 15 - Lunar Roving Vehicle
This is a view of the Lunar Roving Vehicle photographed alone against
the desolate lunar background during an Apollo 15 lunar surface
extravehicular activity (EVA) at the Hadley-Apennine landing site. This
view is looking north. The west edge of Mount Hadley is at the upper
right edge of the picture. Mount Hadley rises approximately 4,500
meters (14,800 feet) above the plain. The most distant lunar feature
visible is approximately 25 kilometers (16 miles) away. (Courtesy NASA)

Apollo 17 - Taurus-Littrow Landing Site
This is the landing site of the last Apollo mission (Apollo 17). It was
in the valley among the Taurus-Littrow hills on the southeastern rim of
Mare Serenitatis. Astronauts Eugene Cernan and Harrison H. Schmitt
explored the valley with the aid of an electrically powered car. This
image shows Schmitt inspecting a huge boulder that has rolled down the
side of an adjacent hill. (Courtesy NASA)

Apollo 17 - Large Lunar Boulder
Earth in the far distant background is seen above a large lunar boulder
on the Moon. This photo was taken with a handheld Hasselblad camera by
the last two Moon walkers in the Apollo Program. (Courtesy NASA)

Apollo 17 - Lunar Scape
This image is an excellent view of the desolate lunar space at Station
4 showing scientist-astronaut Harrison H. Schmitt, lunar module pilot,
working at the Lunar Roving Vehicle during the second Apollo 17
extravehicular activity at the Taurus-Littrow landing site. This is the
area where Schmitt first spotted the orange soil which is visible on
either side of the Lunar Roving Vehicle in this picture. Shorty Crater
is to the right, and the peak in the center background is Family
Mountain. A portion of South Massif is on the horizon at the left edge.
(Courtesy NASA)

Apollo 17 - Orange Soil
These orange glass spheres and fragments are the finest particles ever
brought back from the Moon. The particles range in size from 20 to 45
microns. The orange soil was brought back from the Taurus-Littrow
landing site by the apollo 17 crewmen. Scientist-Astronaut Harrison J.
Schmitt discovered the orange soil at Shorty Crater. The orange
particles, which are intermixed with black and black-speckled grains,
are about the same size as the particles that compose silt on Earth.
Chemical analysis of the orange soil material has show the sample to be
similar to some of the samples brought back from the Apollo 11 (Sea of
Tranquility) site several hundred miles to the southwest. Like those
samples, it is rich in titanium (8%) and iron oxide (22%). But unlike
the Apollo 11 samples, the orange soil is unexplainably rich in zinc.
The orange soil is probably of volcanic origin and not the product of
meteorite impact. (Courtesy NASA)

Limb of Copernicus Impact Crater
This image of Copernicus was acquired on the Lunar Orbiter 5 Mission.
Copernicus is 93 kilometers wide and is located within the Mare Imbrium
Basin, northern nearside of the Moon (10° N, 20° degrees W.). Image
shows crater floor, floor mounds, rim, and rayed ejecta. Rays from the
ejecta are superposed on all other surrounding terrains which places
the crater in its namesake age group: the Copernican system,
established as the youngest assemblage of rocks on the Moon (Shoemaker
and Hackman, 1962, The Moon: London, Academic Press, p.289-300).
(Courtesy USGS/NASA)

Apollo 17 - Oblique view of Copernicus
This is an oblique view of the large crater Copernicus on the lunar
nearside, as phtographed from the Apollo 17 spacecraft in lunar orbit.
(Courtesy NASA)

Views of the Solar System copyright © 1997-2005 by Calvin J. Hamilton.
All rights reserved. Privacy Statement.

Next time you get sush view of Earth



Saul Levy wrote:
Nice try, WartHole! Looks like another Japanese animated monster
movie. The animation doesn't even match the translated description!

What are the Japs at the end jumping up and down about? The home
islands were CRUSHED!

Saul Levy


On 24 Jun 2006 18:31:20 -0700, "Warhol" wrote:

Meteorite Collision


Cool Link
http://www.ursispaltenstein.ch/blog/...ite_collision/


  #4  
Old June 26th 06, 01:34 AM posted to alt.astronomy,alt.fan.art-bell,alt.usenet.kooks
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Meteorite Collision

Warhol wrote:

YAWN, FEK OFF.. why, you can't suck it anyway, half wit,. they said
when jumping up and down. They will do anything for attention from
their masters. IT REALLY GRINDS THE JAPS TO KNOW THAT THEIR MASTERS
IGNORE THEM.


I can't help it - Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha While I find very little to agree with
you, I thought you could do far better than this.

BRING ON THE WENCHES! WHADDYA EXPECT IMA PIE'RAT

TAR DE HAR HAR THAR


Huge pools of molten warswine.

The Moon
I had the ambition to not only go farther than man had gone before, but
to go as far as it was possible to go. - Captain Cook

Spacecraft Mission
Educator's Guide to Eclipses
Educator's Guide to Moon Phases


[screed flushed]

--
Official Associate AFA-B Vote Rustler
Official Overseer of Kooks and Saucerheads in alt.astronomy
Co-Winner, alt.(f)lame Worst Flame War, December 2005
Official "Usenet psychopath and born-again LLPOF minion",
as designated by Brad Guth

"And without accurate measuring techniques, how can they even
*call* quantum theory a "scientific" one? How can it possibly
be referred to as a "fundamental branch of physics"?"
-- Painsnuh the Lamer

"Well, orientals moved to the U.S. and did amazingly well on
their own, and the races are related (brown)."
-- "Honest" John pontificates on racial purity

"Significant new ideas have rarely come from the ranks of
the establishment."
-- Double-A on technology development
  #5  
Old June 26th 06, 05:43 AM posted to alt.astronomy,alt.fan.art-bell,alt.usenet.kooks
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Meteorite Collision

On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 18:34:15 -0600, Art Deco wrote:

Warhol wrote:

YAWN, FEK OFF.. why, you can't suck it anyway, half wit,. they said
when jumping up and down. They will do anything for attention from
their masters. IT REALLY GRINDS THE JAPS TO KNOW THAT THEIR MASTERS
IGNORE THEM.


I can't help it - Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha While I find very little to agree with
you, I thought you could do far better than this.

BRING ON THE WENCHES! WHADDYA EXPECT IMA PIE'RAT

TAR DE HAR HAR THAR


Huge pools of molten warswine.

The Moon
I had the ambition to not only go farther than man had gone before, but
to go as far as it was possible to go. - Captain Cook

Spacecraft Mission
Educator's Guide to Eclipses
Educator's Guide to Moon Phases


[screed flushed]


proof that this is BS
http://goatse.ragingfist.net/

  #6  
Old June 27th 06, 12:39 AM posted to alt.astronomy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Meteorite Collision

Yes, WartHole, it's true: We, your masters, ignore you!

Saul Levy


On 25 Jun 2006 16:44:43 -0700, "Warhol" wrote:

YAWN, FEK OFF.. why, you can't suck it anyway, half wit,. they said
when jumping up and down. They will do anything for attention from
their masters. IT REALLY GRINDS THE JAPS TO KNOW THAT THEIR MASTERS
IGNORE THEM.


I can't help it - Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha While I find very little to agree with
you, I thought you could do far better than this.

BRING ON THE WENCHES! WHADDYA EXPECT IMA PIE'RAT

TAR DE HAR HAR THAR

The Moon
I had the ambition to not only go farther than man had gone before, but
to go as far as it was possible to go. - Captain Cook

[rest of screed deleted]


Saul Levy wrote:
Nice try, WartHole! Looks like another Japanese animated monster
movie. The animation doesn't even match the translated description!

What are the Japs at the end jumping up and down about? The home
islands were CRUSHED!

Saul Levy

  #7  
Old June 27th 06, 01:07 AM posted to alt.astronomy,alt.fan.art-bell,alt.usenet.kooks
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Meteorite Collision

Art Deco , the decrepit panhandler and vain Marmite
miner who likes rough anus bludgeoning with mosquitoes, and whose
partner is a hussy with an inflamed fuffle, wrote in
:

Warhol wrote:


TAR DE HAR HAR THAR


Huge pools of molten warswine.


Not to mention the huge Freudian slip.



--
**** pure; knee; exhibitionistic ****ing; pectoral; bazumbas; Belgian
biscuit n. A vile and non specific sex act performed by the staff of a
rub-a-tug shop (qv). As in 'How much? Fifty quid, eh? Does that include
Belgian biscuit?"; on the nest; immodest masonic secret self-handshakes;
ailurophile; jillin' off; bracket face; androsodomy; two raisins on a
bread board; diseased fortune nookie; bad sex; the salami; play the
trombone; squashing the meat; bearded; roasting the broomstick; Art
Deco, Pale Tranny Riding A Cock In The Park; little sister is here;
admirate; play at in-and-out; man in; Art Deco, Sexy Young Gay Spreads &
Banged On Desk; exotic a bit of the old in and out; saturated
bourneville boulevard; funky milk trays; piece of; Art Deco and Couple
of hunger men get someone into cot in apartment; overt cakeboy; demented
armadillo exercising; bi-curious; ride someone; stiff stander; brown
trout : n. A turd; big job; ****e.; friend from the red sea; sleaze-slut
slut lets dudes **** in mouth; tumble-down pillows; under; ass-hole;
cleaning the fish; anesodia; noxious ****-hole; apple dumplings; tadpole
yoghurt euph. A dressing to accompany a sausage sandwich (qv).; sugared
almond : n. Clitoris.; batman and robin; bud; Enema of the State; big v;
slushy anal orifice; king sized cans; Art Deco and Lustful cooks ****ing
each other and sucking dicks; tops and bottoms; Art Deco's hairy ass was
banged; bollock-naked; lurid pudwhacking; dive; the plague; battle;
shameless nut sucking; crab ladder; meat-seeking ****ile; apple head;
tiki-tiki; skin the live; combustofiatulation n. The highly dangerous
act of flame throwing with one's trouser trumpet.; bit of snug for a;
hand solo n. A solitary hand shandy (qv).; a little game of
hide-the-sausage; bully boy; ripe muddy-starfish; Art Deco in extreme
lady of the streets **** action; blue chamber district; cum swallowing
arse monkey; Art Deco, Nude Tanned Tranny Ass****ed Outdoor; get down to
it; sissy pato; infected rusty bullet wound; licentious carnal
gymnastics; thoughtless bouquet-of-pansies; nefarious bone dance;
phallic quencher; break a lance with; beauns; ripe tunnel; night work;
unpleasant rusty bullethole; drives the meat bus into tuna town; rabid
cock-eating; child-getter; indiscriminate vacuum cleaner sessions; Busty
Babe Art Deco Peeing In Bottle & Golden Shower; butt smasher; biological
response; Art Deco nude and candid Mastercard-Mary; necessaries;
bunch-punch; Art Deco, Hot Tranny Sucking And Ass ****ing Gay Boy; give
him one; delicate mommy button; red moon rising; Art Deco and Beefy
horny man quick cumshot sperm on face to guy; twanger; bacon bazooka
euph. Penis; pork sword; the pink oboe (qv); yak n. 1. A large, hairy
animal of untidy appearance. 2. Feminist's beaver (qv); minge with a
pant moustache (qv).; get one's jollies; Art Deco in high heels, latex &
leather woman of accomodating morals; fervid ice-cube sandwiches;
quailing fag-hag; lascivious pin-my-legs-back-hard fun times;
crumpet-trumpet; tiny doo-hickey; Art Deco, nude
woman-of-accomodating-morals slut in dutch disco; undignified
sink-the-pink escapades; assault on a friendly weapon; butt-ugly; scutz
around; inflamed butt-hole; penis in erectus; pent up corndog; rough poo
chute; Art Deco, Close Up Gay Blowjob & Wet Ass****ing; erotic pork
pounding; queef US n. Vaginal fart; front botty burp.; hanging salad
euph. Wedding tackle (qv).; animal house; botsy; knuckle; box of
dominos; frick; the behind; gaunt dirty cushions; poor injection
erection; sodden chuff; dingdong; inactive kajoobies; lesser sweet meat;
whirlygigs; unhygienic man-lover; hot brown-eye; have relations with;
have a bit of skirt; bone dance; infectious growler; squalid tires; body
odor; deficient zamboni baloney; anglican length; impale someone;
jizz-drinking piccolo player; leather vice-sister and Art Deco with
dildo; abnormal; secondary jugs; Pornstar Art Deco Humiliates Old Man
Femdom; russel the; Art Deco and Two Tanned Muscle Gays Wild Banging In
Bedroom; tether one's nag; play the clitar; debauched anal-rape; do the
horizontal hula; abuse oneself; bore; ravenous backseat mambo; The Whore
of the Worlds; meat whistle; erect twin cities; squat; ziggy-wiggling;
Beauty and the Bitch; rigid elephant trunk; big bikini bizkit; glowing
hidey hole; hatch; perverse four-legged frolic; Art Deco doing gold
dildo; baked alaska; do me nasty; carnal stump; horrid gutted rabbit;
man root; aunt fancy; balloon; destructive yodel in the valley;
agoraphilia; wear it up in curls; nasty bits; perform; Close Up Art Deco
****ing & Cum Drenched Bodies; plunger; bangles; obscene bedsheet
pounding; petty kahunas; hindenburgs; albedosynia; forget-me-nots : n.
The final notes in a Chinese singing lesson (qv); droplets which form a
tiny but embarrassing wet patch on your trousers. Also dicksplash.; Gay
Art Deco, Black Group Orgy Tight Anus ****ing; picnic lunch; deranged
roman helmet rhumba; golden rivet; leisurely ramburglar; lung disturber;
flat admiral winky; blabber; beat it like it owes you money; Hairy
Pooter and the Sorcerer's Bone; butch cut; with; broken balls; Ball the
President's Men; blackout romeo; Snow White and the Seven Inches;
buntline hitch; do a nifty; depraved bull session; yams; secret
services; loathsome busties; a tergo; tender chi-chis; trypan; crashing
the custard truck; violent dirty-factory inspections; grids; hairy
Oscar; nipplecrunchers; butch cut; What's Eating Gilbert's Grapes?; The
Reproducers; budgie's tongue; bad; debased knee-tremblers; bang v. To
have sex; to shag. e.g. 'We were banging, like a ****e house (qv) door
in the wind". n. A sexual encounter; a shag.; shameless back-door
bandit; Blond Babe Art Deco Outdoor Peeing & Shows ****; immense
Hollywood uterus; Art Deco stars in revenge of the jersey split-arse
whore!; bash the; cheesy bunnet; throwback butt buddy; gully-hole; tubby
mietje; baby motel; burp the baldman; lovebud; inhuman interior
sledging; automasochism; anility; slash and burn n. 1. Deforestation
technique. 2. A painful symptom of venereal disease.; bologna bop; A
Midsummer Night's Cream; jack; wang; stiff peter; bonk-on; dick up; Art
Deco, Deepthroat Sucking Young Gay Muscled Booty; skirt; jaundiced
skid-pipe plumber; haggard lord hardwick; yawning closet queen; Art
Deco, Stupid Slut Getting Her Face Full Of Hot ****; unmentionables;
skin the pizzle; horrendous waterbed waltz; a-hole; bum crumbs : n.
Kling-ons (qv) which have ceased to kling. Usually found in the bed or
in the gusset of the trollies (qv).; Rambone; jaboos; inventive humpin'
and bumpin'; tracy bits; Art Deco, 3some Gay **** Double Penetration;
brown hatter; autohedonia; maniacal dick sucking; tucked up perkies;
debauched hammer slammin'; teasing the tuna taco; cum-gargling bronco;
small person; villainous dirt-tamper; slushy cum dumpster; buffarilla;
behind door work; Horny Old Grandma Art Deco Gets Her Snatch Licked; old
goose's neck; stretched dick dent; wimpy sweater puppets; Art Deco,
Blonde Skank Getting **** Over Her Sweet Face; lather; frinding tool;
demented sexual behavior; anocrat; action; sucking ass king; get a hunk;
plaster of warm guts; scumbag; brother starling; beady-eyed huckle; Art
Deco and Three six packed dudes perform formation threesome ****; best
and plenty of it; metula; stacks; blootered; yabba dabbas : n. The
climactic stages of intercourse which immediately precede the dooooooos!
The vinegar strokes.; wringing-wet barking-spider; unsightly tailgater;
Pornstar Art Deco ****ing On Herself; do some ladies' tailoring; Art
Deco and Three hard gay studs sucking sweet cock and eat cum;
blood-thirsty bit of crumpet; gargantuan galoonas; prominent bosom; bean
pods; Art Deco, Nude Tanned Tranny Ass****ed Outdoor; dopper; incapable
pantry shelves; Art Deco and bunch of young floozys in whoopee-girl
orgy; tenuous padding; forking; Art Deco and Lovely dudes takes big dick
and hottie sucks it to guy; boff v. To **** (qv).; Art Deco, Black Gay
Undressing & Sexy Posing; furious nookies; red rider's revenge; flingel
rhym. slang ****. From The Shadows instrumental hit 'The Rise and Fall
of Flingel Bunt'.; feral interspecies sex; lowly twin peaks; shoot in
the bush; Chalfonts rhym. slang Haemorrhoids. As in: Chalfont St. Giles
- piles.; extreme viado; ratty gazoo; better half; dilapidated moan pie;
contemptuous anal fisting; Art Deco, Cheap Hoe Gettin ****ed On; Art
Deco, Cute 19yo Gay Wild Jerking Big Cock; burlington hunt; distressed
humdingers
  #8  
Old June 27th 06, 01:10 AM posted to alt.astronomy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Meteorite Collision

Do you need more enlightenment masters??? The sky is falling!!!! "All
Americans to receive asteroid counselling."

http://edition.cnn.com/2004/TECH/spa...fly/index.html .

Astronomers know nothing about the universe, except for a few large
bodies with regular orbits. Any idiot should have understood that the
in April 14, 2004, as comet Bradfield (diameter : 10,000 km) popped out
of nowhere to become the largest body ever recorded in the inner solar
system..."

Saul Levy wrote:
Yes, WartHole, it's true: We, your masters, ignore you!

Saul Levy


On 25 Jun 2006 16:44:43 -0700, "Warhol" wrote:

YAWN, FEK OFF.. why, you can't suck it anyway, half wit,. they said
when jumping up and down. They will do anything for attention from
their masters. IT REALLY GRINDS THE JAPS TO KNOW THAT THEIR MASTERS
IGNORE THEM.


I can't help it - Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha While I find very little to agree with
you, I thought you could do far better than this.

BRING ON THE WENCHES! WHADDYA EXPECT IMA PIE'RAT

TAR DE HAR HAR THAR

The Moon
I had the ambition to not only go farther than man had gone before, but
to go as far as it was possible to go. - Captain Cook

[rest of screed deleted]


Saul Levy wrote:
Nice try, WartHole! Looks like another Japanese animated monster
movie. The animation doesn't even match the translated description!

What are the Japs at the end jumping up and down about? The home
islands were CRUSHED!

Saul Levy


  #9  
Old June 27th 06, 01:14 AM posted to alt.astronomy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Meteorite Collision

Do you need more enlightenment masters??? The sky is falling!!!! "All
Americans to receive asteroid counselling."

http://edition.cnn.com/2004/TECH/spa...fly/index.html .

Astronomers know nothing about the universe, except for a few large
bodies with regular orbits. Any idiot should have understood that the
in April 14, 2004, as comet Bradfield (diameter : 10,000 km) popped out
of nowhere to become the largest body ever recorded in the inner solar
system..."

Saul Levy wrote:
Yes, WartHole, it's true: We, your masters, ignore you!

Saul Levy


On 25 Jun 2006 16:44:43 -0700, "Warhol" wrote:

YAWN, FEK OFF.. why, you can't suck it anyway, half wit,. they said
when jumping up and down. They will do anything for attention from
their masters. IT REALLY GRINDS THE JAPS TO KNOW THAT THEIR MASTERS
IGNORE THEM.


I can't help it - Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha While I find very little to agree with
you, I thought you could do far better than this.

BRING ON THE WENCHES! WHADDYA EXPECT IMA PIE'RAT

TAR DE HAR HAR THAR

The Moon
I had the ambition to not only go farther than man had gone before, but
to go as far as it was possible to go. - Captain Cook

[rest of screed deleted]


Saul Levy wrote:
Nice try, WartHole! Looks like another Japanese animated monster
movie. The animation doesn't even match the translated description!

What are the Japs at the end jumping up and down about? The home
islands were CRUSHED!

Saul Levy


  #10  
Old June 27th 06, 01:42 AM posted to alt.astronomy
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Meteorite Collision


Warhol wrote:
Do you need more enlightenment masters??? The sky is falling!!!! "All
Americans to receive asteroid counselling."

http://edition.cnn.com/2004/TECH/spa...fly/index.html .

Astronomers know nothing about the universe, except for a few large
bodies with regular orbits. Any idiot should have understood that the
in April 14, 2004, as comet Bradfield (diameter : 10,000 km) popped out
of nowhere to become the largest body ever recorded in the inner solar
system..."

Saul Levy wrote:
Yes, WartHole, it's true: We, your masters, ignore you!

Saul Levy


On 25 Jun 2006 16:44:43 -0700, "Warhol" wrote:

YAWN, FEK OFF.. why, you can't suck it anyway, half wit,. they said
when jumping up and down. They will do anything for attention from
their masters. IT REALLY GRINDS THE JAPS TO KNOW THAT THEIR MASTERS
IGNORE THEM.


I can't help it - Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha While I find very little to agree with
you, I thought you could do far better than this.

BRING ON THE WENCHES! WHADDYA EXPECT IMA PIE'RAT

TAR DE HAR HAR THAR

The Moon
I had the ambition to not only go farther than man had gone before, but
to go as far as it was possible to go. - Captain Cook

[rest of screed deleted]


Saul Levy wrote:
Nice try, WartHole! Looks like another Japanese animated monster
movie. The animation doesn't even match the translated description!

What are the Japs at the end jumping up and down about? The home
islands were CRUSHED!

Saul Levy



Another asteroid, a half-mile-wide rock, will whiz past us on July 3!

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/13556129/

Just another near miss in this shooting gallery where we seem to be the
target!

Double-A

 




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