How long is it?
Why not longer?
Why no other country is as long?
How does that make Chileans incomprehensible?
A thread about Chile and its humongous length
🧵
Chile is as long as the US and Canada combined
Chile is as long as all of Europe!
It can stretch from Norway to Morocco
From London to Baghdad!
You can stack over a dozen European countries in Chile north to south
Of course, that means Chile has every possible climate
And of course, Chile is so long because of the Andes. Here's a map of elevation in South America
You can't easily pass these mountains, and the tiny sliver of land west of it is Chile
(map from @cstats1)
Of course, the mountains are due to the Nazca and tectonic plate hitting the South American one
Here's a superb image of a Chilean volcano (composite of many)
But why so long?
Why not longer?
You can get a sense of that by looking at a satellite map of this region.
From it, can you guess where Chileans live?
You can see it comparing the satellite map and the map of night lights
Chileans live in the middle of the country, in the northern part of the green stripe
What's happening?
(map from @researchremora )
Winds blow westward closer to the Equator and eastward farther south
The Andes stop all the water from the Atlantic closer to the Equator, and from the Pacific farther south
That's why both Brazil and Chile have rainforests
The Chilean one is a temperate rainforest—like in the Pacific Northwest in North America
So all southern Chile is green, but only the northern half of that is warm enough for comfortable living (and closer to other countries' centers of population). That's where most Chileans live
(maps from @PythonMaps and @researchremora)
What about the northern part then, the desert?
Since that area is so dry, it can't handle a lot of population
(These flowers from the Atacama Desert only bloom every few years, when rainfall is unusually high)
And since it's closer to the center of South America, it has neighbors...
Few locals + lots of neighbors➡️This area was contested for a long time after the Spanish Empire collapsed
This is a map of contested areas in South America, 1879
Peru & Bolivia went to war with Chile for that region, but they lost in the War of the Pacific
Why fight? Natural resources: guano and saltpeter
Back then, guano was the main fertilizer (and this area had most of the world's guano, thanks to the climate)
Saltpeter➡️gunpowder
So why is Chile so long, but not longer?
• Sliver between coast & Andes
• Far south: too cold for another country
• Far north: competing neighbors
• Natural border there: desert. Chile won the war to get the tip
That's also why most Chileans live in the middle of the country: too cold in the south, too hot and dry in the north
You can see that effect in a map of South American roads
Cold, heat, sea and mountains make Chile a country—an extremely isolated one
And that's also the main reason why Chileans are incomprehensible: So isolated from all other Spanish speakers!
Why is there no other country so long?
You need a north-south sandwich between sea and continent, far enough from the equator so as not to be densely populated
That means an oceanic plate subducting under a continental plate, which only happens in the...
"Chilean Empire"
Far from the equator, that just leaves:
• Pacific Northwest➡️Got conquered by the Eastern US before it could develop into a standalone country
• Japan: The mountain chain starts from deep under the sea➡️It's an archipelago rather than a continental sliver
So that's why Chile is the longest country in the world!
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What makes Budapest unique?
It wasn't just 2 cities (Buda + Pest) but 3-4!
Why?
And why is it where it is?
Why did it become the capital of Hungary?
It's no coincidence, and it explains the history of the country
Look at this:
Thread 🧵
The Pannonian Basin, this huge plain surrounded by mountains, was going to have a capital. But where would it be?
It would probably be on the main artery: the Danube, which splits the plain in half 1. Navigable all the way to Germany—fantastic for trade 2. Drinking water, great for living 3. Water for irrigation ➡️ crops
But early on the Danube had another huge advantage:
Why is Hungary so small?
As this map shows, it could be bigger
It used to host one of the world’s most powerful empires—Austria-Hungary
Now it’s tinier & poorer. What happened?
Explaining it also explains Orbán, or why Hungarians hate their borders🧵
You see that big plain surrounded by mountains? That's a perfect region for a single country: well-connected, fertile plains, protected by an easily-defensible wall of mountains.
That is, indeed, where Hungary was for nearly 1000 years!
It's called the Pannonian Basin
All these mountains catch humidity that flows down as rivers, which criss-cross the country, bringing lots of irrigation
The biggest one is the Danube, so big & gentle that it's navigable, connecting it with Germany & creating trade and wealth along its controllable path
Two shocking events from last week unmasked eco-terrorists disguised as environmentalists:
1. The Philippines banned golden rice, condemning thousands of children to blindness and death 2. German Greens lied to closed nuclear plants
This is what happened and how to reverse it:
1. Golden Rice Ban
Golden Rice has added vitamin A over 100,000 children every year and turns blind over 100,000 more
Golden Rice has additional vitamin A, and eliminates that problem
But Greenpeace got a Filipino court to ban it. Why?
The court says "there's not enough evidence". But there is, proven by safety tests from countries like the US, Canada, and NZ. It is just like rice, except with more Vit A
You think housing prices will keep going up because you've seen it all your life. But this is a historic anomaly that is likely to reverse soon: Prices might start shrinking in many places.
This thread is the case against investing in housing:
Our perception of real estate prices is extremely biased.
Most ppl alive today have only experienced them since WW2, but that's a completely anomalous period!
Prices before did not grow as much. Here are real prices for 14 countries
What happened?
Supply and demand
The last 80 years have seen a growth of housing demand never seen before. At the same time, supply has been shrinking consistently. These trends are all reverting now. Let's look at them in detail:
Why do Jamaicans speak English, when most of its neighboring countries don’t?
Why was the pirate capital there?
Why is it underwater now?
Why did pirates drink rum?
Why are most Jamaicans black?
This map of shipping lanes today gives you a hint:
Jamaica is in the middle of all these shipping lanes, but isn't a major shipping hub today
This is not new: Back in Spanish colonial times, Jamaica was not in the main trade routes either
Spain's main goods were silver from Mexico and Peru and luxury goods from China
Spaniards gathered them in Panama, Portobello, Cartagena, and Veracruz
Ships arrived from Spain to Puerto Rico and left via Habana (Cuba)
Jamaica was not a main port
Why?
This machine makes fuel from thin air
It's carbon neutral
And it does this at record-low costs
Energy and the environment will look completely different in 10 years
Here's why: 🧵
The problem with fossil fuels today is not that we burn them, it's where they come from: They had been locked in the ground for millions of years and now they're back in the atmosphere. The pbm is the "fossil", not the "fuels"
If we make fuels out of thin air, we can burn them
How can we do it?
Natural gas is mostly methane (CH4)
You just need some energy to force some carbon (C) to bing to hydrogen (H)
Carbon can come from air (CO2)
Hydrogen can come from water (H2O)
The energy can come from the sun (solar panels)