• snappy@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    I always heard it as “-tite” because it hangs tight to the ceiling and “-mite” because it might poke you in the ass

  • moebiusstrop@piefed.social
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    7 hours ago

    stroppy take: Stalactites don’t usually curve and do start out broad and grow down skinny, so really an “m” looks more like stalactites hanging from a ceiling. I’m going to have to forget I ever saw this.

  • Talos@sopuli.xyz
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    10 hours ago

    “When the mites come up the tights (-tites) come down”. -my 1980’s chem teacher

  • CerebralHawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 hours ago

    I’m 46. I can’t tell you hour long it’s been since I heard these terms. They’re completely unimportant outside of a very niche science (but, not entirely useless knowledge).

    The stuff about Nutty Putty Cave plummeted my interest in caves to absolute zero (tl;dr caver ends up trapped upside down and his remains are still there and the cave has since closed, real nightmare fuel and not even the only cave it’s happened in).

    • dfyx@lemmy.helios42.de
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      10 hours ago

      Your tl;dr makes it sound like they found his body, never bothered to recover it and put a „do not enter“ sign in front of the cave.

      It’s much worse than that. He was found while he was still alive and over a hundred rescuers tried to get him out until his heart couldn’t handle it anymore and he died after 27 hours. Only then they decided to leave him there, used explosives to collapse the passage to where he was stuck and then blocked all entrances with concrete.