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uriel238 , 1 month ago Oh, if you're particular to the white ones, it's the -40° that'll kill you. Not the bear.
Oh, if you're particular to the white ones, it's the -40° that'll kill you. Not the bear.
wieson , 1 month ago Yeah... the -40° and the opened abdomen
Yeah... the -40° and the opened abdomen
vrighter , 1 month ago celsius or fahrenheit?
celsius or fahrenheit?
fjordbasa , 1 month ago Yes
Yes
Colour_me_triggered , 1 month ago Both
Both
wieson , 1 month ago I got another one: The -40° acute angle of your neck
I got another one:
The -40° acute angle of your neck
Anticorp , 1 month ago They'll both kill ya, it's just that the cold is more likely to get to you first if you're unprepared. If you're prepared then the bear will have a nice wrapped meal.
They'll both kill ya, it's just that the cold is more likely to get to you first if you're unprepared. If you're prepared then the bear will have a nice wrapped meal.
uriel238 , 1 month ago As the bodies on Mount Everest shows us, it's easy to not be prepared for the levels of cold it can get in some places on earth such as the poles. Fun trivia: In To Build A Fire which takes place in the Yukon, Jack London notes that it's -70° This is to say, the secret ending is that the dog didn't make it (or did only by a miracle of probability).
As the bodies on Mount Everest shows us, it's easy to not be prepared for the levels of cold it can get in some places on earth such as the poles.
Fun trivia: In To Build A Fire which takes place in the Yukon, Jack London notes that it's -70°
This is to say, the secret ending is that the dog didn't make it (or did only by a miracle of probability).
Anticorp , 1 month ago My favorite poem ever about the cold is The Cremation Of Sam McGee.
My favorite poem ever about the cold is The Cremation Of Sam McGee.