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by Retric
4106 days ago
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Moving that much of the crust around would likely to create fairly massive earthquakes and the surface of the earth is effectively floating so you are limited on how much you can change things. Still if you’re willing to move a lot of rock you could more or less get it to work. But, your solution would raise the land and lower the sea levels at the same time. You want the difference (added land) + (lower ocean) = 20M. (.25 land : .75 ocean = 1:3) Removing 5M of sea floor would add 5 * 3 = 15M of land 5 + 15 = 20. Of course there is little need to raise all land just the low lowing areas would be enough. Or you could also make new land vs messing with any of the existing land. |
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Bonus question #1: If sea level rise is an exponential with respect to time, at what rate would we have to extract sea floor material to keep the level at a current coastline constant?
Bonus question #2: What is the minimum sea wall you would need along the coast of all continents in order to hold back sea level rise?
The point being such questions are always useful for eliciting the interviewee's response who questions they might consider to be "unknowable" when they start the interview.