I think HH made it clear enough that the answer would be the one he was thinking of rather than the more common interpretation - which Termite was the first to get.Quote:
Originally Posted by HappyHammer
Printable View
I think HH made it clear enough that the answer would be the one he was thinking of rather than the more common interpretation - which Termite was the first to get.Quote:
Originally Posted by HappyHammer
Anyway - the next question is either the interloping question from Driver or we are waiting for Grunt as he got my DeLorean one right.
So something from a fictional book is considered a theory now is it? Hang on, I'm thinking of a theory now. What is it?
Sorry got so confused with them damn interlopers.
What is the fastest fish? How fast can it go?
That dinosaurs are thin at one end, thick in the middle and thin at the other?Quote:
So something from a fictional book is considered a theory now is it? Hang on, I'm thinking of a theory now. What is it?
Sailfish? 100+kph
True. Except for the ones that aren't :pQuote:
Originally Posted by Grunt
Darren, you are correct and fast.
”Most sources believe that the fastest species of fish is the
Indo-Pacific Sailfish Istiophorus platypterus. It has been clocked in
excess of 110 km/h (68 mph) over short periods.”
Imagine having one of those suckers on the end of your line :eek:
Very much so. Where was the more common interpretation of the Holy Grail from, the Bible?Quote:
Originally Posted by silentC
Who is credited with having coined the term 'dinosaur'?
SC, The theory is mentioned in the book, if you're not going to read it I'm happy to PM you a fuller explanation? Not sure it will really spoil the book anyway...Quote:
Originally Posted by silentC
HH
Yair - but what about that sneaky movie reference, eh? Eh?
I think Silent should read the book. Remembering Silent's book choices from a separate thread - I think he would like it. It's a good blend of thriller with a heavy science/historical thread rather like Longitude/Surgeon of Crowthorne etc. And I really think it would spoil the book to know what the answer to your question is.Quote:
Originally Posted by HappyHammer
I probably will read it. It's OK, I just like a good argument - in case you haven't noticed ;)Quote:
Originally Posted by HappyHammer