i'm starting to really get into this fun lottery, and how i wouldn't bother having a website listing all of them... i desecrate them - meaning i write myself in after them... this particular one? ironically it's on the topic of geology - or it's rather tinged with geology... and they usually arise from the concept i had to work out of the λoγoς - so unto the heights of finding the concept of φoνoς - for the former is like an image to the ear, even though a skeletal one: or x-ray that pierces the tongue - and this googlewhack arose from mishearing an icelandic word (i'm still to find the correct λoγoς - but the φoνoς that lead me to the 4th googlewhack is) *yokolaups - a phenomenon in iceland - and who would have thought: geology? which ties itself to chemistry in ways that biology and physics have teamed up for some cultural *******, or whatever the hell they're doing on the television and in other media outlets... ****** populists... give me a geology topic and i'm listening... this googlewhack arose from the topic of the missoula floods - and the man behind finding them j harlen brentz - basically these gargantuan floods that occurred in the last ice age - the mystery of mammoth graves in siberia in that: why would the people of the times slaughter 1000 mammoths and not eat them? but the brentz floods happened such a long time ago, and their was scale was so huge that some didn't believe the evidence to be there, since they were cooked up in their universities and only had theories... anyway... the word in question? "yokolaups"? it's icelandic a similar flood phenomenon that's currently happening in iceland: basically a lake forms inside a glacier... and just as it happens with concrete dams and artificially created lakes to ensure there's a constant water supply and no drought... the concrete dams can sometimes give way, and the water spills over... same thing with glaciers and the lakes that are created inside of them... did i mean jokulhaups? maybe... all i know is that corvus corax's song sverker has that aura that it might as well be, but certainly something icelandic.