As we know, the earth's atmosphere is about 65,438+0,000 kilometers high. Just put a thousand kilometers of water pipes outside the atmosphere without a pump. Because of the pressure difference between the atmosphere and space, the seawater in the Pacific Ocean will automatically spray into space through water pipes. Because of the great pressure difference, the injection height is very high, fierce and spectacular.
The sea water in the earth's oceans has been drained, which really makes people on all coasts make a windfall. There are countless creatures in the ocean that can be carried at will. Because there are too many aquatic products, people can't carry them all directly by vehicles, which promotes the rise of aquatic products refrigeration industry. The great treasure on the bottom of the sea is harvested for free. Rare aquatic life on the seabed has surfaced for research. The endless resources of the huge seabed abyss are easy to be exploited and acquired by human beings. It is the original ecological aquatic edible resources of the ocean that will produce two or three Ma Yun-level figures. Searching for gold, silver and jewels on the seabed for thousands of years will also enrich mankind from generation to generation. The exploitation of seabed oil, coal mines and diamonds has made mankind rich to a new level. All this makes people laugh and get carried away.
As the sea dried up, fresh water from the mainland began to flow into the depths of the sea floor. As a result, rivers and lakes in Dachuan began to dry up, and people had to use ice and snow as daily water. The price of people's drinking water once soared to 100 USD per glass of water. Large-scale industry and agriculture stopped production and closed down due to the lack of water resources, and workers and farmers lost their jobs, hunger and thirst eventually triggered a world war.
Because the great gravity of ocean water disappeared, the seabed became a crack in the crust, and the crust began to move and repair, which triggered an epic super earthquake. . . .