Every crack and fissure in the earth's crust is already filled with water. A huge new crack would create tsunamis and an equal and opposite upheaval of land mass displaced to create the crack.
No, the ocean won't disappear.
This. For the uninitiated: There’s a 400-million-year-old ocean beneath West Virginia. It's called the Iapetus Ocean. Saw a video about a family that tapped into it, think, like a drilled well. The family evaporates the water and they package & sell the salt left behind.
This opens up all kinds of interesting questions about the interior of the earth. Rock sinks in water. How do massive underground caverns capable of holding entire oceans exist? Shouldn't heavier rock sink towards the center of the earth, pushing the lighter (and liquid) water to the surface? I'm not a flat earth retard, but the idea of the earth being a solid sphere is hard to reconcile. Wouldn't that much water under pressure cause massive geysers? Is the rock above it really that water tight and rigid? How did the giant void get there to hold the water in the first place with gravity acting upon it for billions of years?
I think the water undergound is better described as a bucked of gravel that is then filled with water. There are not likely any ocean sized cavities. But their are ocean sized areas where both the rock/stone/gravel and water are mixed together.
I could be wrong about all this. But this is how it was described to me.
Only a White man would ask so many questions about that.
The earth is expanding in size.
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