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Post by Azvolrien on Aug 26, 2010 3:33:54 GMT -5
Rust needs oxygen and moisture to form. No water, no rust.
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Post by Annadesu on Aug 31, 2010 20:08:20 GMT -5
*looks at the end of the movie* Well, they're screwed!
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Post by CloverWolf on Sept 1, 2010 7:22:33 GMT -5
XD Oh yeah, I totally forgot about that~! Meh, I'm sure a towel and a hair dryer will do'em some good. XD
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Post by girthedoggy on Sept 3, 2010 22:50:11 GMT -5
*reads over* Um. . . Did that really make sense? ^^; Yes, but, that doesn't explain the Scientist's corpse. I mean, it still had flesh on it, it would've rotted.
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Post by CloverWolf on Sept 5, 2010 7:42:13 GMT -5
But not if the gas killed all that bad flesh-eating bacteria, right? You can even see that in the end of the movie, when the drops fall on the screen, the little amoebas are swimmin' around, showing that the bacteria is coming back to the planet. ^^
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Post by Bane on Sept 7, 2010 22:30:35 GMT -5
When you REALLY think about it, the gas "killed everything".
What is bacteria a part of? Everything. What hasn't rotted? Bodies. What NEEDS bacteria to rot? Bodies.
Gas killed everything, INCLUDING bacteria, hence the non rotting bodies. They're just... for lack of a better word, beef jerkied or mummified.
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Post by 6&7/MLP Fan on Sept 8, 2010 13:44:04 GMT -5
Oh jeez You know what this means? This means that all those bodies left will start degrading... XP Heh, maybe the Scientist plannned ahead when he designed the Stitchies without noses ^^
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Post by Illi-Snowflake on Sept 14, 2010 15:38:08 GMT -5
*Takes huggles* Call me anything other than Snowy and we're good. Thanks. You know, I never thought about the water until you mentioned that. My guess is that humans in a last-ditch effort to survive tapped into underground water stores like wells or that the machines in the process of destroying the city made wells explode, thereby allowing water to still flow from underground. If you look closely in the background of the wing-beast attack, you can see a small river running on the edge of the ruins. Perhaps there's more water to this world than we think.
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