Category talk:Natural history of Vermont

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Really need someone's imput as to what they expect here on the article page. Is every lake and mountain "natural history?" I don't think that was the editor intent who created this category. Student7 13:32, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Comments: Lake Champlain is a paleo lake. Any Meteor impact craters in Vermont? For British Columbia's natural history, the Frozen Lake had a meteor blow up. They picked up tons of the Rockfall off the ice. For the United States, I went into my brain and found: Dutch Elm disease, also Tornado Alley. I kinda went all over the place, then went to individual states and found all 5000* linkages, (Linkages: "what links here" often go past 10,000), to examine them: Nova Scotia has an atmospheric phenomenon item, also found in Australia. (Passenger Pigeon also goes into the Nat'l history of North American: Trainloads were fed to PIGS !)(One flock, took 3 days to pass by.) ...(Notes from the ArizonaSonoranDesert...) -Mmcannis 15:08, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I like the idea, but still don't quite "get" it. The Green Mountains were originally formed during the Ordovician. So they aren't unique, right? Because they are all the same. LOTS of glacial lakes. Nothing unique there. Lots of rocks, Silurian-Devonian. Again, nothing unique. Has to be unique to go here. New/Old immaterial. I think Mansfield is in here. Because it's big? How about asbestos mines?  :) Student7 17:56, 5 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]