Maybe just stick with
gushers then, because they have about the same sugar content.
Not exact matches
Two hundred tons of the things should slow the
gusher enough that it can
then be stopped with a more conventional injection of mud, says Wattenburg, a research scientist at the Research Foundation of California State University, Chico, and a consultant to Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.
Sometimes the relationship between the seasons and an object is obvious:
gushers run low in fall, high in spring and freeze in winter, so if you need to reach someplace up high you'll switch to spring and
then winter to create a vertical pillar of ice.
And in light of BP's reluctance to release underwater footage of the
gusher itself — and
then when it is released independent analysis shows official estimates of flow rates and underestimated by at least a factor of ten — it's easy to see some sort of fascist collusion going on, when it all may just be confusion.