Geo (Gio) Rutherford
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Rivers are more spooky because of like rapids and because of flooding and because of the way that civilizations build themselves around rivers and then rivers deceive them.
Like rivers turn around and like destroy things.
And that's kind of what's more spooky about rivers is like, they're just, they're killers, you know?
And so unlike lakes where like lakes are just kind of chilling there and they're not really doing anything, but they got, they got secrets at the bottom.
So it's like a different type of spooky.
There's actually, I feel like there's lakes that have come in like almost every color of the rainbow.
There's actually a set of lakes in Indonesia that look like a mood ring.
They've like changed into all these different colors.
So any lake that is connected to a volcano has the potential of being like weird, wacky colors.
So like Kauai Jen is like neon blue and you get these lakes like any lake that has these different types of minerals coming up.
It could be black.
It could be red.
It could be orange.
It could be like any of those weird colors as a result.
Lake Hillier, though, is a little different.
I have talked about Lake Hillier.
I've talked about pink lakes in general because there's a lot of pink lakes on Earth.
There's a lot of amazing pink lakes on Earth, including Lake Repa in Senegal.
Even our Great Salt Lake here in the United States is often a pink lake, and that's because of the salt content.
So these pink lakes are usually salty, and as a result of the salt, you end up with this pink algae that grows there.