Tenshinai wrote:TN4994 wrote:
Back to the Hulk lifting the tank in the first place. Wouldn't the concentrated weight on his feet cause him to sink into the earth?
fallsfromtrees wrote:
Probably. Or rather, under most circumstances, yes.
Let's do a little arithmetic. An Abrams M1A2 tank is 68 tons, or 136,000 lbs. It will be spread across about 2 sq ft of surface that the Hulk is standing on. This gives us a pressure of approximately 3.25MPa (mega pascals). Stanford University has an interesting table of compressive strengths of soil and rock, and it gives the compressive strength of hard soil (difficult to indent with thumbnail) as 0.4-1MPa, so yes standing on hard soil, he is going to sink into the ground. it gives the compressive strength of weak rock (Crumbles with blows of pick end of hammer) at 1.25 to 5Mpa, so may or may not sink into weak rock, depending on how weak it is.
If an adequate representative soil sample is procured and processed (10 lbs of soil through a #4 sieve) and a Proctor test is properly performed yielding the optimum moisture content per maximum dry unit weight represented by a properly drawn graph of the available data, then appropriately applied to obtain a 98+ percent compaction, then I can guarantee no sinkage.
If not, just backfill the hell out of it with some crusher-run from the nearest quarry. That stuff will compact like unchecked earwax.
Or, just have them fight on soil prepped, tamped and prepared for an airport runway, a reigning skycraper, or a nuclear power plant. Trust me, 10 hulks playing catch with a tank on that ground wont even put a dent in it, even considering the undistributed downward force of the constrained delivery system to base.
Fantastic Four's "Thing" setting on same surface and passing gas notwithstanding.
I get billed out over $1000 an hour for this. Robbery! The company to me.