This summer, a first-of-its-kind global research expedition followed up on that surprise. Drilling for fresh water under the salt water off Cape Cod, Expedition 501 extracted thousands of samples from what is now thought to be a massive, hidden aquifer stretching from New Jersey as far north as Maine.

It’s just one of many depositories of “secret fresh water” known to exist in shallow salt waters around the world that might some day be tapped to slake the planet’s intensifying thirst, said Brandon Dugan, the expedition’s co-chief scientist.

“We need to look for every possibility we have to find more water for society,” Dugan, a geophysicist and hydrologist at the Colorado School of Mines, told Associated Press journalists who recently spent 12 hours on the drilling platform. The research teams looked in “one of the last places you would probably look for fresh water on Earth.”

  • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Just accelerate the entire universe evenly, nothing gains kinetic energy relative to anything else, the change is undetectable and the energy used to accelerate everything is so iretrivable you can’t even prove it ever existed.

    • StinkyFingerItchyBum@lemmy.ca
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      17 hours ago

      I’d like to see your empirical data. Have you considered shear forces on other dimensions? I suspect it may be multiverse climate change as others heat up.