Engineer wrote:Or you could ask the cash for gold guys.
mbailey1234 wrote:Hadn't ever heard of this idea but I would like to get my hands on the punks that thinks it's cool to steal the bronze plaques off of the veteran's graves in our area.
Engineer wrote:The average woman wears a size 6, with a circumference of 51mm. If we assume a cross sectional area of 4 square mm, you wind up with 204 cubic mm. Assuming 14k, you're left with 119 cubic mm, or .119mL of 24k. Multiply that times the density of 19.32g/mL, and I'd hazard a guess of 2.3g/ring.
Or you could ask the cash for gold guys.
rexmerdinus wrote:Assume a mere 1% of those are buried with their wedding bands, so 6,665.
Assume each of those is buried with a ring containing 2.3 grams of AU, so a bare minimum of 15,328 grams (492.31 OZT) of gold gets buried with women in cemeteries in the US per year.
rexmerdinus wrote:I think in a thousand years or so, our cemeteries of today will be proverbial gold mines!
rexmerdinus wrote:Assume 50% of those are women, so 1,110,795.
Morsecode wrote:True dat
However, I think your 10% survival rate is a tad optimistic
beauanderos wrote:Well... let's see.... there's you... and me... and IdahoCopper... and 68Camaro... and we're all over at Nickelless's place going thru all his supplies. What percentage is that? Oh yeah, we have Deal doing perimeter patrol.
Rosco wrote:Or we could skip the guys in Illinois more for the rest of US
beauanderos wrote:Keep an eye on this one
uthminsta wrote:rexmerdinus wrote:Assume 50% of those are women, so 1,110,795.
Men wear wedding bands too.
beauanderos wrote:After the 90% mass die off following TSHTF... I doubt there will be many concerned with enforcing the old laws.
uthminsta wrote:No one is buried in Illinois. They are all kept in the democratic headquarters, so they can come out and vote every so often.
IdahoCopper wrote:This seems like a situation waiting for an engineer to design effective tools. Hmmm... a core drill to go through 6' of dirt and bore into the casket, wood, bronze, etc. A tool like an endoscope with light and a gripper; maybe with a small metal detector attachment. Shouldn't be all that difficult to whip up.
beauanderos wrote:IdahoCopper wrote:This seems like a situation waiting for an engineer to design effective tools. Hmmm... a core drill to go through 6' of dirt and bore into the casket, wood, bronze, etc. A tool like an endoscope with light and a gripper; maybe with a small metal detector attachment. Shouldn't be all that difficult to whip up.
you can buy one from Doc, he already invented it.
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