Ibtisam

Nomads
  • Content Count

    16,069
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Ibtisam

  1. :mad: And u can have the job of religion bro, you will be in charge of making sure girls like IB and nameless wear their full body armor, hijab or else face stringent justice. Kidding ladies, if I was Amir woman would honored and protected. i have not even posted on this thread yet!!1 why oh why, these little boys;..... if you guys run somaliland/somali i would stay in London or go home sweet home, where there are no skinny farahs calling names!!!
  2. Scarface :eek: :eek: they guy that called me all those nasty names with coke can and teh khat avator :eek: :eek: oh and he has a big scar on his face!!! damn thats crazy :mad: :rolleyes:
  3. Austrilians :eek: :eek: Are you out of your mind
  4. hhm can't really think of any sexy people. But i say Red Sea and Nameless; all those lessons; hhhm i wonder what is learnt after all those hrs together :eek:
  5. UK somali's rock lool just kidding; i have no idea. Are you going to tell us.
  6. hello. Guys i know i will be long gone in 10million years!! But providing the world does not end by then, there will be humans, living in horn of Africa; I’m worried for them and what will happen to them. Stop being so selfish people.
  7. somali is going to drop off into the sea. and in the mean time we are fighting over it. we are we going to go after
  8. A Continent Splits Apart By Axel Bojanowski http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/spiegel/0,1518,405947,00.html Normally new rivers, seas and mountains are born in slow motion. The Afar Triangle near the Horn of Africa is another story. A new ocean is forming there with staggering speed -- at least by geological standards. Africa will eventually lose its horn. Geologist Dereje Ayalew and his colleagues from Addis Ababa University were amazed -- and frightened. They had only just stepped out of their helicopter onto the desert plains of central Ethiopia when the ground began to shake under their feet. The pilot shouted for the scientists to get back to the helicopter. And then it happened: the Earth split open. Crevices began racing toward the researchers like a zipper opening up. After a few seconds, the ground stopped moving, and after they had recovered from their shock, Ayalew and his colleagues realized they had just witnessed history. For the first time ever, human beings were able to witness the first stages in the birth of an ocean. Normally changes to our geological environment take place almost imperceptibly. A life time is too short to see rivers changing course, mountains rising skywards or valleys opening up. In north-eastern Africa's Afar Triangle, though, recent months have seen hundreds of crevices splitting the desert floor and the ground has slumped by as much as 100 meters (328 feet). At the same time, scientists have observed magma rising from deep below as it begins to form what will eventually become a basalt ocean floor. Geologically speaking, it won't be long until the Red Sea floods the region. The ocean that will then be born will split Africa apart. The Afar Triangle, which cuts across Ethiopia, Eritrea and Djibouti, is the largest construction site on the planet. Three tectonic plates meet there with the African and Arabian plates drifting apart along two separate fault lines by one centimeter a year. A team of scientists working with Christophe Vigny of the Paris Laboratory of Geology reported on the phenomenon in a 2006 issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research. While the two plates move apart, the ground sinks to make room for the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden. Bubbling magma and the smell of sulphur A third crevice cuts south, splitting not far from Lake Victoria. One branch of the rift runs to the east, the other to the west of the lake. The two branches of this third crevice are moving apart by about one millimeter a year. The dramatic event that Ayalew and his colleagues witnessed in the Afar Desert on Sept. 26, 2005 was the first visual proof of this process -- and it was followed by a week-long series of earthquakes. During the months that followed, hundreds of further crevices opened up in the ground, spreading across an area of 345 square miles. "The earth has not stopped moving since," geophysicist Tim Wright of the University of Oxford says. The ground is still splitting open and sinking, he says; small earthquakes are constantly shaking the region. Scientists have made repeated trips to the area since the drama of last September. Locals have reported a number of new cracks opening in the ground, says geologist Cynthia Ebinger from the University of London, and during each visit, new crevices are discovered. Fumes as hot as 400 degrees Celsius (752 degrees Fahrenheit) shoot up from some of them; the sound of bubbling magma and the smell of sulphur rise from others. The larger crevices are dozens of meters deep and several hundred meters long. Traces of recent volcanic eruptions are also visible. In a number of places, cracks have opened up beneath the thin layer of volcanic ash that covers the region. As there is no ash in the fissures, it's clear that they opened up after the volcanic eruptions, most of which took place at the end of September or in October, 2005. A number of locals who fled the eruptions have reported that a black cloud of ash -- spewed out of the Dabbahu volcano -- darkened the sky for three days. A new ocean floor on the Earth's surface Basalt magma has risen into some of the crevices. For the moment, Ayalew explains, the lava seems not to be rising further. A number of recent eruptions, though, have left layers of new basalt lava on the Earth's surface. And it's the exact same kind of lava that spews out of volcanic ridges deep under the ocean -- a process which slowly pushes older lava sediments away on either side. The process has only just begun in the Afar Triangle -- and scientists for the first time can witness the birth of a new ocean floor. The source of the African magma looks to be a gigantic stream of molten rock rising from beneath the Earth's crust and slicing through the African continental plate like a blow torch. It's a process that began thirty million years ago when lava broke through the continent for the first time, separating the Arabian Peninsula from Africa and creating the Red Sea. Now, it's the Afar Triangle's turn and it's sinking rapidly. Large areas are already more than 100 meters (328 feet) below sea level. For now, the highlands surrounding the Denakil Depression prevent the Red Sea from flooding these areas, but erosion and tectonic plate movement are continually reducing the height of this natural barrier. The Denakil Depression, which lies to the east of Afar, is already prey to regular floods -- each flood leaving behind a crust of salt. Africa to lose its horn The chain of volcanoes that runs along the roughly 6,000 kilometer (3,730 mile) long East African Rift System offers further testimony to the breaking apart of the continent. In some areas around the outer edges of the Rift System, the Earth's crust has already cracked open, making room for the magma below. From the Red Sea to Mozambique in the south, dozens of volcanoes have formed, the best known being Mt. Kilimanjaro and Mt. Nyiragongo. These fiery mountains too will one day sink into the sea. Geophysicists have calculated that in 10 million years the East African Rift System will be as large as the Red Sea. When that happens, Africa will lose its horn. source: http://www.weatherwars.info/index.php?news_id=58&start=0&category_id=&parent_id=0&arcyear=&arcmonth=
  9. ^you want more details of what they also said
  10. No hun. i got bored half way. so went back to reading my essay. is the ending good?
  11. hhhm. you mean other thab my own;; hhhm i'll come back later and cast my vote!
  12. ^^^ what is this madness
  13. ^^ well as far as I am concerned your all bloody Somali and the same, regardless of what name you call your self or where you originate from, you all look the same, talk and walk and act teh same.
  14. Sex is over rated. What is there to talk about :rolleyes: :rolleyes: it is nothing nasty or mysterious about it, and you certainly don't need to be brave to talk about it. What is there to be brave about :confused: In saying that, there is time and place for everything. i don't see the constant need to talk about sex, it is unnecessary and unless you are x-rated, been around the block kinda chick there is not much to say. Somali people older people have strange views about it, for example whenever me and my family talk about it, the female always insist it is torture and a burden on women and men are selfish assholes, who only see their desires and nothing else. I’m out peace
  15. Just don't go there on a friday night. the place is jam-packed with farah's you start to feel odd :rolleyes: or EID
  16. loool@ hateful thursday; nameless i know you hate me who cares EdiT: Khalaf huh, :confused: who??
  17. never heard of her till today. She sounds like she has too much time on her hands and is bit confused about her identity. Someone tell her Sudan and Somalia are two different countries, or maybe she can't make up her mind.
  18. yeah well somali's like to hate^ i hate you seriously there is a big problem within the somali community. they need to lighten up and live and let others live :rolleyes: bloody haters :mad: In my whole life on one has asked my qabil but then i have not been to somalia yet i guess it is like your first name when you go back home. As a londer Yahoo i think you are Exaggerating a little, just a little
  19. loool^^ me too. how much does it cost i wonder? :confused: Nameless and Azmaya: WAKE UP: i would rather Somali divided and moving forward or at least showing signs of development in some parts, rather than united in name and a failed state for the next 100years. Azmaya you are an idealist. And let me tell you honey, you do distinguish between people, if not you would not be denying the identity of a whole region. Unity is based on equality and respect, something that is lacking in somali's, and reflected in people like you. in any case using the term Somaliland has nothing to do with qabill it is region, which was always called Somaliland. Everyone should build their own back yard and stabilising before you start dreaming about a greater "somalia" only thing Somalia is known for is war, famine, malnutrition and disease. It is this cycle you should be trying to break, not people's identity. cheers
  20. coool. lovely pictures Red sea. Thanks Azmaya: The Red Sea did you make a typo brother, did u mean Somalia Picture Gallery . There is no such thing as somaliland, poor baby. Oh Lord, say it enough and you start to believe it is that it? And visa-verse; if you contently deny something you will soon believe that it does not exist. Just watch the pictures and amus love, No one asked you for a political debate. Miskeen.
  21. Ibtisam

    Diary Entry

    Sounds like all the little chicks are fighting. :rolleyes: Relax and do what you please. Nameless stop explaining yourself to everyone love.
  22. MODs where were you when my thread was getting abused left, right and centre!!!! Sorry to hear that you had such first hand expreince...rough time huh? Dysfunction and abuse isn't a tolerable thing regardless of who it is coming from....On behalf of all (my word) men, I could only apologize...Good for you thou very few people can turn their lives around like that and get their Masters at 25... :rolleyes: :rolleyes: sounds like you are having a hard time understanding me. Don't think too much you might bust your brain. Khalaf and Tahliil why are you guys arguing about nothing, it is a waste of time your both user names!!! Relax no one go harm anyone. You are all entitled to your views just respect each others. We all know that we bush comes to shove you will hide behind the bed/rock/door/bus: and your trying to convince us you will die for xaliom's. Trying getting on as fellow farahs then extend the love and care to xaliom's. Otherwise i going to see you'll in a street corner saying same S*hit to a chick in five years time. Easy now. bishy: thanks Peace
  23. Ibtisam

    Diary Entry

    ^^^huh :confused: :eek:
  24. ^^^^SPEAK ENGLISH> even mine english is better. :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :cool:
  25. thepoint: ^^Funny - I thought your posts had a kindergarten quality to them. They were barely comprehensible as English language posts. really! i thought the same thing about bartender :rolleyes: Edit: IB damn where u come from? lool fast girl. Good day baayo lool hey 2you too.