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1 MIN AGO: Niagara Falls STOPS FLOWING — Scientists Discover What's Blocking It Underground

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6 million cubic feet of water per minute

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gone. Not reduced, not slowed, gone. The

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most visited waterfall on the planet,

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the thundering border between two

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nations, the geological heartbeat of the

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entire Great Lakes system. Silent and

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what the United States Geological Survey

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discovered in the 48 hours that followed

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is not a weather event, not a seasonal

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anomaly, not a malfunction in a

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monitoring instrument. It is something

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moving underneath Niagara. Something

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ancient. Something that according to

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three independent research teams should

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not be moving at all. Hi, my name is

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Daniel and this is Natural Disasters.

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The morning it stopped minuteby minute.

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March 14th, 2026, 5:52 in the morning,

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Eastern Standard Time. A park ranger at

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Niagara Falls State Park, the oldest

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state park in America, by the way,

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established in 1885, is completing a

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routine overnight patrol along the

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American Falls observation deck. Her

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name is not being released publicly, but

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what she reports to her supervisor at

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5:54 a.m. becomes the first official

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record of what will become one of the

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most alarming geological events in North

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American history. The roar is gone. Not

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diminished, not quieter than usual.

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gone. The constant bone deep thunder

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that locals describe as the background

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noise of their entire lives. A sound so

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permanent that people who grew up in

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Niagara Falls, New York, report that

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they only notice it when they travel

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somewhere else. Is simply absent. She

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radios in. Her supervisor assumes

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equipment failure. Then he steps outside

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his office. By 6:15 a.m., the

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International Control Works, the joint

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American Canadian facility that has

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regulated water flow to Niagara Falls

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since 1951,

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detects a catastrophic drop in flow

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volume through its automated monitoring

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systems. Engineers who arrive on site

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describe looking at readings that make

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no physical sense. The Niagara River is

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still moving upstream of the falls.

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Water levels in Lake Erie, which feeds

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the entire system, show no abnormal

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drop. The volume of water approaching

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the falls is within normal parameters

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for a March morning, but the falls

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themselves have stopped. By 7:03 a.m.,

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the United States Geological Survey

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activates its Great Lakes emergency

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monitoring protocol. Calls go

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simultaneously to the Army Corps of

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Engineers, the Ontario Ministry of

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Natural Resources, and the International

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Joint Commission, the Bational Body that

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governs shared waterways between the

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United States and Canada. By 7:30 a.m.,

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aerial surveillance drones are in the

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air over the gorge, what the drone

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cameras show, and what would not be

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released publicly for another 11 hours

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stops everyone in the monitoring room

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cold. The base of the falls is dry, not

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foamy, not misted, not partially

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exposed, dry. Ancient bedrock that has

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not been visible without artificial

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dewatering since 1969 is sitting

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completely exposed in morning light. And

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running through that exposed bedrock

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from the base of the Horseshoe Falls

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northward along the gorge wall is a

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fracture system that was not there 72

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hours ago. a fracture system measuring,

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according to initial drone estimates,

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over 400 meters in length. At 8:45 a.m.,

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the first USGS geologist to reach the

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gorge floor looks into the largest

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fracture opening and radios back a

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single sentence. There is a void down

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here, and it is not small.

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What scientists found underground

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here is what has geologists in complete

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panic. The water did not stop because

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something blocked the river from above.

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There is no ice jam. There is no debris

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field. There is no equipment malfunction

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at the control works. The water is

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arriving at the falls exactly as it

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should. 6 million cubic feet per minute

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pressing toward the edge of the Niagara

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escarment. And then it is vanishing into

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the ground. Emergency ground penetrating

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radar teams deployed by the USGS reach

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the gorge by 10:00 a.m. on March 14th.

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What they map over the following 6 hours

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rewrites everything the scientific

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community believed and understood about

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the structural integrity of one of the

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most studied geological formations in

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the world. Beneath the base of the

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horseshoe falls in the dola stone and

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limestone layers that form the

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foundation of the Niagara escarment.

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Ground penetrating radar is detecting a

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void. Not a crack, not a fissure. A

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void. a cavern complex stretching a

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minimum of 260 m east to west and

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dropping to depths exceeding 40 m below

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the gorge floor. And it is not a natural

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formation that has been there

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undisturbed for millennia. The radar

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signatures show fresh collapsed

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surfaces. Rock faces that fractured

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within the last 96 hours. This cavern

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did not exist last week. Dr. Patricia

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Hullbrook, senior geologist with the

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USGS Great Lakes Science Center in Ann

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Arbor, reviews the radar data from a

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mobile command unit positioned at the

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gorge rim. She has studied the Niagara

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escarment for 22 years. She describes

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what she is seeing in terms that make

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the room go quiet. The collapsed

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surfaces indicate a sudden catastrophic

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failure of the Dole stone caprosque. The

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underlying Rochester shale, a soft

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erodable layer that has always been the

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geological weak point beneath the falls,

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has lost structural integrity across a

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footprint that we cannot yet fully

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define. Water is not going over the

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falls. Water is going into the falls. It

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is being absorbed into the void at the

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base and draining through fracture

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networks into the shale layer below. She

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pauses. She looks at the radar screen

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for a long moment and then she says, "We

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do not yet know where it is going after

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that." Here is what makes that sentence

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terrifying. The Rochester shale beneath

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Niagara is not an isolated layer. It is

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part of a continuous geological

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formation that extends across a massive

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portion of the northeastern United

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States and southern Ontario. It connects

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through bedrock pathways that have never

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been fully mapped to aquafer systems

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serving millions of people. It sits

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beneath cities. It runs under

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infrastructure. It connects underground

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to systems that the public has never

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been told are geologically linked to

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Niagara Falls. And right now, in March

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of 2026, 6 million cubic feet of water

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per minute is pouring into it.

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Seismographs at monitoring stations in

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Buffalo, in Rochester, in Hamilton,

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Ontario, all detect something beginning

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at approximately 11:00 a.m. on March

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14th. Micro tremors. Not strong enough

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to feel, not strong enough to set off

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any automated warning systems, but

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consistent, rhythmic, following the

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fracture pathway beneath the gorge

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northward at a rate of approximately 2

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m/ hour. Dr. James Okonquo at the Lamont

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Dherty Earth Observatory in New York

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reviews the seismic signatures and

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reaches for his phone. He calls USGS

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headquarters in Restston, Virginia. He

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does not wait for a call back. He calls

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direct. The micro tremors, he tells

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them, are not aftershocks from the

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initial collapse. They are propagation

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signatures. The void is growing. The

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collapse is still happening and it is

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moving.

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the geology beneath the thunder.

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To understand why this is catastrophic,

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you have to understand what is actually

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underneath Niagara Falls. And I promise

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this is not a geology lecture. Okay, it

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is a little bit of a geology lecture.

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But stay with me because once you see

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the picture, you will understand exactly

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why three separate research teams used

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the word irreversible in their

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preliminary reports on March 14th.

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Niagara Falls exists because of a

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geological accident that dates back

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approximately 12,000 years to the end of

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