Photo by @mattabbottphoto and published by the @nytimes
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Prikaži ovu nitHvala. Twitter će to iskoristiti za poboljšanje vaše vremenske crte. PoništiPoništi
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1,221°F is the melting point of aluminum.
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A figure that no one - other than people in Myanmar - understand :) 669.3°C is its melting pointpic.twitter.com/wkufNjSveT
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It would have been respectful had you taken the trouble to credit this remarkable picture, don’t you think, Daniel? For the record it’s by
@mattabbottphoto and published by the@nytimes amongst others from his coverage. Took me 1 minute to find this out. You’re welcome. -
Thanks. I was on Reddit yesterday morning and I couldn't find the author then.
- Još 3 druga odgovora
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Tweet je nedostupan.
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I'm sure there's a good reason your profile picture is of a guy who died 3 years ago. (Google Image Search isn't your friend).https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/name/thomas-holloway-obituary?pid=182458813 …
- Još 1 odgovor
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That’s just a car fire and not from the current fires happening now. The trees still have their leaves.
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Here's a forest fire in Tennessee that also melted the alloys of a vehicle. Notice how the trees also have leaves; it's a fire not a nuclear explosion, you can often get burnt charred leaves on trees after a fire.https://autoweek.com/article/car-news/tennessee-forest-fires-liquefy-aluminum-rims …
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The temperatures for this to happen are so high, it really shows how hot the fires get, even though the tree trunks don’t look as if they have burnt much. That’s what astonishes me. The heat from the leaf litter and grasses.
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Burning tires mainly.
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Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
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