mcculley 18 hours ago

One thing that surprised me when I started running a tugboat business: A country can be both an exporter and importer of sand. Sand of one type goes from the U.S. to The Bahamas to be used in concrete. Sand of another type goes from The Bahamas to the U.S. to be used in aquariums. Specialty sands go to make regulation volleyball courts.

  • whartung 13 hours ago

    Just marveling as an old school computer programming geek that I happen to be in a forum that also includes someone in the tugboat business.

    • junon 5 hours ago

      We have the programmer to woodworker pipeline, programmer to runner pipeline... is there a programmer to tugboat operator pipeline I'm missing out on?

      • dsign 5 hours ago

        From what I remember from this particular code-base, there are also:

        - Programmer to farmer

        - Programmer to musician

        - Programmer to writer

        and of course

        - Programmer to landlord.

        • pletnes 5 hours ago

          There is also literally anything to programmer. I didn’t use to be a programmer, but now I’m a programmer consultant.

        • CSSer 5 hours ago

          Don’t forget programmer to pilot. Every time an aeronautical post appears they come out of the woodwork and chat about equipment.

  • lb1lf 16 hours ago

    Indeed!

    Then there is all kinds of specialty sands - say, when replacing the sand in our local athletics union long jump pits, I learned that one should use sand from river beds (as opposed to sand crushed at a plant) as the river sand is much less likely to cause abrasions, seeing as all the sharp edges have been worn away as the sand has been shifted back and forth by the river current...

    Sand is not just sand.

    • delichon 12 hours ago

      The best night's sleep I ever had was on the sand of a turn in a dry creek bed, after a very long day's hike. It must have had a big rock underneath that caught the day's warmth and kept me toasty all night. And the sand itself felt like floating on a cloud. It was a magical place. And one of the stupidest I ever slept in due to the risk of flash floods.

      • adra 11 hours ago

        One of the best meals I ever ate was a store bought can of chiii cooked over a tiny camp burner after a long hiking through the Grand Canyon. Sometimes it's the simple things during the most exceptional situations that can cement such a strong memory... It did for me anyways.

        • delichon 10 hours ago

          Yes, but. I had some of the most memorably bad sleeps on the same trip. Like wrapped around a tree trunk on a slope in a blizzard. Not magical one bit.

          • rangerelf 10 hours ago

            Magic can also be scary, so... the other kind of magical?

        • amy-petrik-214 7 hours ago

          One of the most romantic dalliances I ever did have was on the soft sand on the beaches of Italy, moonlight, red wine, the sand felt like velvet and silk rolled into one. I just think back on it and think to myself "let me brag about how great it was on the internet" 10/10 you missed out.

      • dbetteridge 11 hours ago

        I was reading your first sentence with apprehension as my first thought was flash floods!

        Glad you made it out safe, with a story to boot.

      • dukeofdoom 7 hours ago

        You should try sleeping on a fresh haystack. Most people will never experience this. But the haystack is made up of cut flowering meadow plants. So it's like sleeping in a bouquet of dried flowers. And the aromatic organic chemicals released all night can have a very calming effect. It's kind of wild to think about, but people used to get it on in haystack barns all the time.

        • orthoxerox 5 hours ago

          I tried that and it was made of cut grasses. You know how grasses have foxtails that cling to animals to help distribute the seeds over a wider area? I was that animal that night and I didn't like it one bit.

    • blitzar 14 hours ago

      The sand people have over 50 different words for sand.

      • dataflow 13 hours ago

        A few examples would be nice!

        • akerr 29 minutes ago

          Coarse, irritating, gets-everywhere…

        • bch 13 hours ago

          Trrru'uunqa! (Probably).

      • 7e 12 hours ago

        They identify as and prefer to be called Tusken Raiders, thank you very much.

  • eru 8 hours ago

    > A country can be both an exporter and importer of sand.

    That's pretty normal in general. Eg Germany both imports and exports a lot of cars.

    • oe 7 hours ago

      My favorite example of this is trucks transporting Finnish bottled water to France and then bringing French bottled water back.

      • Ekaros 4 hours ago

        Reminds me of getting can of S.Pellegrino water with something in it. Looked at back of the can and wondered why is this in Japanese... So my guess is that it was first made in Italy, then shipped to Japan and then imported back to Finland...

        One starts to question sanity of our consumption habits at times. I am no way environmentalist, but this sort of stuff just seems waste of energy inputs.

        • HPsquared a minute ago

          It's more that ocean shipping is extremely cheap.

        • eru 3 hours ago

          As long as you can ship stuff on a boat over the ocean, and don't care too much how long it takes, shipping it even multiple times across the planet is fine. Barely costs anything, both in terms of money and in terms of resources.

          The (first and) last miles via truck can cost a lot more, but you can't guess those from whether there's Japanese writing on the label.

  • beala 11 hours ago

    Trade is a technology that turns concrete sand into aquarium sand.

  • dyauspitr 9 hours ago

    Yeah but there is going to be a massive imbalance in the quantity of those two types of sand. I bet the sand required for aquariums is a rounding error on the amount of sand required for concrete.

    • xbmcuser 8 hours ago

      Well not really Bermuda has population of 60000 only so the sand they import for construction might even be less than the sand US import from Bermuda for its aquariums

    • eru 8 hours ago

      Yes, though the difference in value is probably not quite as stark as the difference in mass. (Ie aquarium sand is probably more expensive than concrete sand.)

sundarurfriend 15 hours ago

> I tried to track down the original source of this idea ... Beiser cites an article from the UN, which itself cites a 2006 paper about using two types of desert sand from China in concrete. But that paper doesn’t mention the roundness of the particles at all.

This seems to be a fairly common pattern where a citable source (Beiser's book and the UN article) makes a mistake, that then propagates everywhere as common knowledge even though it's incorrect. There are many well-researched blog articles like this out there, where the author has dug deep, done the hard research, and found mistakes at many levels, but because it's not in what academia or Wikipedia considers a "citable" source, the mistaken assertion continues to be propagated. Until someone manages to present it in an academically acceptable format, if that happens at all.

Solving the "what should be a citable source" problem is complicated, but in the interim, I hope we can at least find a way to transfer these well-researched findings and corrections from non-academic sources to citable forms regularly and easily.

  • NeoTar 5 hours ago

    The BBC Maths and Statistics programme 'More or Less' has coined a term for statistics like this - 'Zombie Statistics'. An initial, often misquoted fact, which is useful as a soundbite and gets repeated over and over and over again, despite multiple debunkings.

  • tourmalinetaco 14 hours ago

    The problem is that what defines a “citable source” for Wikipedia is loose at best and malicious at worst. There are many examples where “improper” sources are accepted, especially in social matters, because they benefit a certain viewpoint. STEM is, for the most part, decent, but anything covering the life of people needs to be considered carefully due to the lack of several types of important sources and the biases present on many people’s pages.

    • max-ibel 8 hours ago

      If you're bilingual, it's often useful to read a wikipedia topic in more than one language, as the editorial slant may be different in different languages.

      Can at least confirm for German/English.

    • squigz 8 hours ago

      Could you give some examples?

caust1c 19 hours ago

Grady is a hero in engineering reporting and documentaries. I've learned so much about how the world works in other engineering disciplines from Practical Engineering, and often in neglected fields that are losing talent faster than it can be replaced.

It gives me hope that teenagers are watching his videos and becoming inspired to go into infrastructure. More than anything, I appreciate his calm and reasoned perspectives that are so lacking in video content in this modern day and age.

  • FredPret 16 hours ago

    100% - he calmly explains various approaches and their tradeoffs.

    He’s not exactly a traditional journalist, but this is what I want the future of journalism to be like. People with subject matter expertise explaining their thing simply and clearly.

eichin 20 hours ago

Ironically, we just hit an entirely different "sand catastrophe" - https://mastodon.social/@mimsical/113232531800424706

> the crucibles used to create ingots of silicon which become microchips are made from an ultra-pure quartz sand -- and 70% of the world's supply comes from just one place in North Carolina [Spruce Pine]

  • diggan 20 hours ago

    > and 70% of the world's supply comes from just one place in North Carolina

    A quick search seems to say there are more places available for getting that than North Carolina.

    Is it possible that this specific mine just happens to be the cheapest available right now, but in case they for some reason disappear, there are alternatives everyone would switch to? Or is the situation that if that mine disappears, there is no other alternatives at all?

    • esmIII 19 hours ago

      Could not even be the cheapest, Just the refinement process was developed for this particular sand. A different sand might have different impurities and need different processes to handle.

      • cyanydeez 19 hours ago

        Almost all our modern tech has extremely long tails measured in decades.

        It's basic economics to exploit one source for as long as possible before feasibility changes, but that's a hard argument to make for anyone, even the most experienced personnel because it's all so site specific.

      • hinkley 18 hours ago

        If the particular impurities of this source can be chelated out with safer or cheaper chemicals, maybe in fewer steps, then the cost goes down.

        Of course jurisdictions with poor worker conditions can just use the less safe chemicals and externalize the human toll instead of using more complex safety procedures.

    • tomrod 18 hours ago

      Availability, production scale, and knowledge base.

      I think things will probably pan out okay, maybe a rough month or two as roads (even if rough cut new logging roads), utilities, and prioritized community services get fixed up. Synthetic option is available, apparently, just a bit costly.

    • moomin 17 hours ago

      >> and 70% of the world's supply comes from just one place in North Carolina

      > A quick search seems to say there are more places available for getting that than North Carolina.

      I mean, I deduced it straight from “70%”.

      • zahlman 17 hours ago

        I'm pretty sure the implied argument is that, while this source currently supplies 70% of the total, we aren't actually dependent on it - i.e. production could be scaled up elsewhere.

    • ajross 19 hours ago

      Yeah, this is being overblown. It may very well be that there will be a short term constriction as competitors ramp, but to argue that this is some kind of fundamental bottleneck in semiconductor production is ridiculous.

      It's quartz: literally the single most common crystal on the surface of the planet. Now, sure, I'm sure this particular mine had great stuff, but it's not like it's hard to find.

      No, surely what we have here is a single source provider precisely because the material is so cheap to mine (and therefore unprofitable to try to compete with from scratch).

      • coliveira 17 hours ago

        You're right, but I wouldn't be surprised if this becomes a bottleneck at least for a few months, generating a lot of headaches for some companies.

  • throwup238 11 hours ago

    Spruce Pine doesn't use sand, they mine large quartz crystals out of pegmatites.

  • hn_throwaway_99 18 hours ago

    I wrote this comment on an article that was on HN about 6 months ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39818778

    Sadly, given the insane amount of devastation in western NC, I'll get a chance to test my hypothesis. That is, despite Spruce Pine going offline, the overall impact to the global semiconductor industry will be relatively unnoticeable.

    • chithanh 5 hours ago

      Could also go the other way. Some of you may be old enough to remember the 1993 fire in the Sumitomo epoxy resin factory. Following that, DRAM chips became drastically more expensive (prices increased from $30 to $80 per megabyte) for much longer than the supply disruptions lasted, and interestingly also much longer than other ICs which saw only moderate price increases.

  • ipsod 19 hours ago

    Oh, cool. One of the most common glass batches (raw materials melted to make glass) used by artists is "Spruce Pine Batch".

    • hinkley 18 hours ago

      Wonder if it’s the same stuff or if glass people get a different bin.

      • throwup238 11 hours ago

        The quartz is crushed and sorted for purity so yes it'd be a different bin than the stuff going to make fused quartz for semiconductors.

  • mkonecny 15 hours ago

    A coincidence is not ironic

  • mp05 19 hours ago

    I'm not sure that's technically irony but rather an interesting coincidence.

  • hangonhn 18 hours ago

    The majority of the earth's crust is believed to be made of silicon dioxide. I don't know how much I would believe that we would have a scarcity. It may all come from one source simply because of history.

0xffff2 20 hours ago

Really interesting video. This is the first time I have seen the (apparently entirely fabricated) idea that desert sand isn't suitable for construction challenged. I had definitely absorbed that idea into my consciousness without enough due diligence.

creativenolo an hour ago

The transcript is a pleasure to read. A familiar style to hear but not read. I can’t think of reading something written in the style of a YouTuber before but it is a animated read.

larsrc 18 hours ago

We fools here in Germany sometimes _pay_ to get rid of excess electricity when it's very sunny and windy. How about having some rock crushing machines that instead use that cheap electricity to make more sand?

Thanks for the puns, too.

  • pfdietz 10 hours ago

    One of the proposals for exploiting zero (or negative) electricity prices is storage of the heat at high temperature in refractory solids. This would be used by people who normally burn a fuel for the heat. Instead, they can preheat air and reduce the fuel needed (perhaps reduced to zero).

    Firebrick works up to about 1000 C. A spinoff from MIT is using special nickel-doped chromium oxide (chromia) bricks, which can work up to 1800 C, about the temperature of a natural gas-air flame. These bricks are electrically conductive and can act as their own heating elements.

    https://www.fastcompany.com/91129126/these-bricks-conduct-el...

    https://electrifiedthermal.com/

    https://dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/130800

  • cdchn 16 hours ago

    I hate to say this, but why aren't the Bitcoin miners jumping all over that?

    • slt2021 11 hours ago

      Related: Bitcoin miner RIOT made $32 mln by reducing or being willing to reduce if needed — its energy use consumption.

      https://www.texastribune.org/2024/01/03/texas-bitcoin-profit...

      A company such as Riot also can profit by buying power at negotiated rates ahead of time — retail power companies allow big companies to lock in prices that way — then selling it back into the state market when energy prices soar during extreme heat or cold. In Riot’s case, when electricity prices soared during the summer heat wave, Riot sold power back to TXU, a Dallas-based electricity provider, which sold it back to the grid.

      But if the value of Bitcoin is low and the cost of electricity is high, crypto companies can make more money selling power than mining Bitcoin. In August 2023, Riot reported selling 300 Bitcoins for a net proceeds of $8.6 million. Meanwhile, the company said it earned $24.2 million in credits to its electric bill for selling power back to the grid.

    • applied_heat 14 hours ago

      Because the mining equipment is expensive and the duration of free electricity intervals are outweighed by expensive electricity intervals

    • throwup238 14 hours ago

      Metal foundries in Europe generally have dibs with large, long term power purchasing contracts. IIRC there's even some legislation that favours them since they're a national security resource.

    • niklasbuschmann 14 hours ago

      I assume there are taxes and transmission fees on top of the spot electricity price

      • jagrsw 3 hours ago

        Yup, in one of eu countries i have it on my bill: it's ~0.10EUR/kWh electricity and additional ~0.15-0.20EUR/kWh for taxes + transmission + maintenance, IIRC

  • Someone 16 hours ago

    Free power doesn’t mean free production.

    There’s also labor, wear on the machines and the lost opportunity of using your money to do something else. Building such crushing machines and only use them x% of the time (for, for now, fairly small values of x) may not be a good investment.

  • iamacyborg 3 hours ago

    Time to setup some gravitational batteries to exploit that opportunity.

sideway 19 hours ago

If you found this article interesting, definitely give "Material World: A Substantial Story of Our Past and Future" a read. One of the most eye-opening books I've read in the past few years.

  • iamacyborg 19 hours ago

    Agreed, I read it earlier in the year and found it enlightening.

hermitcrab 17 hours ago

I was in Vietnam on holiday a few years ago and dredging sand out of the Mekong was obviously big business. You could see ships full of it going down the river. Apparently it was supposed to be protected, but that didn't seem to be stopping anyone (there seems to be a lot of corruption in Vietnam). We were told it was causing houses to fall into the river, due to erosion.

rootusrootus 19 hours ago

Every time I watch a practical engineering video I like Grady more and more. Great presenter, interesting videos, great value for the time spent watching. Gets right to the point in the first sentence, and the rest of the video is still worth watching.

Add me to the long list of people who heard the bit about desert sand not being suitable for concrete and believed it. I'm happy to be corrected.

  • fshbbdssbbgdd 18 hours ago

    I almost feel like his videos are anti-clickbait. On my YouTube recommendations page, often his title and cover image are the least eye-grabbing, but the actual video is always satisfying.

    • jabroni_salad 18 hours ago

      His water infrastructure videos always get me because the thumbnail shows off the very cool model that he built just for it :)

  • czstrong 17 hours ago

    He's got a great book as well. I got it because my 4 yo is a Grady fan but I enjoy it and learn a lot as well. "Engineering in Plain Sight: An Illustrated Field Guide to the Constructed Environment"

  • airstrike 19 hours ago

    I don't even care about sand but he's so great I couldn't stop watching it

    • jayrot 18 hours ago

      That's the sign of a truly great "content creator". I've found myself watching a lot of different YT channels on topics I would NEVER have thought I had any interest in.

  • jhwhite 18 hours ago

    > Add me to the long list of people who heard the bit about desert sand not being suitable for concrete and believed it. I'm happy to be corrected.

    Cristobol and Hank's whole business strategy down the drain! (From Barry)

  • stouset 19 hours ago

    I loved how he tackled this from multiple angles.

    Manufactured sand has those rough edges, and is often a waste byproduct of rock crushing anyway. But also, in practice, you want more weathered sand for ease of handling, since too-rough sand is less strong given the same level of workability!

  • ChuckMcM 17 hours ago

    I love his book too. I ended up buying a copy for my sister who kept asking me how I knew all their weird details about things like sewer systems :-)

  • xnx 19 hours ago

    > Gets right to the point in the first sentence,

    Huge respect or the "tldr: no" right at the start.

alex-moon 13 hours ago

"Concrete blows most other materials out of the water."

In fact, according to Wikipedia, concrete is the "second-most-used substance in the world after water" - I was on the Concrete Wikipedia article while I read this as I realised it was a thing I have never thought about despite its ubiquity. Amazing how that can happen.

  • snypher 11 hours ago

    What about eg air, wood? Used by mass or volume or?

    • smt88 11 hours ago

      It seems likely to me that both concrete and plastic are used in greater mass and greater volume than wood.

tminima 19 hours ago

I noticed that the two bars were breaking differently under the hydraulic press. One was crumbling and the other (manufactured) was exploding. There was no mention of this effect in the video. It couldn't be the due to force because in the 2nd half the manufactured bar broke at a lower force. Could this factor has consequences on how manufactured sand concrete behaves with natural phenomenon (hurricanes, earthquakes, fires, etc.)

  • kamray23 4 hours ago

    Putting stress on the concrete requires force, and causes the concrete to deflect. Force over displacement is work, and energy can't be lost to nothingness by just breaking the concrete. Thus, the concrete releases the stored up energy as kinetic energy of its fragments.

    Stronger concrete requires more stress to cause it to fail, and as such it takes more force to break it. There is logically more energy because of the higher force, so more energy gets released.

  • ars 18 hours ago

    Exploding means it was keeping its integrity for longer (i.e. not compressing), and then releasing it when it couldn't anywhere.

    Crumbling means it was falling apart.

    A paper book will explode in a press because it does not have any way to compress and release any of the force on it, until it releases all of it in one shot.

wiz21c 5 hours ago

FTA

> And we have engineered machines that can transform big rocks into small ones.

OK, so you solve a problem of decreasing resources by using additional energy, so more CO2 emissions...

neeleshs 18 hours ago

Learned so much about sand in 20 minutes! He mentions nebula.tv at the end. Does anyone have feedback on the content over there?

  • phyzome 16 hours ago

    Yeah, I subscribe to Nebula -- and he's actually the reason I did. They have a decent size catalog although my interests are narrow enough that I only actually follow a couple of channels there. But that's certainly been worth the price.

lofaszvanitt 17 hours ago

Just like the US debt is about to collapse on pepl and kill the economy, but ... ... it never happens.

  • topspin 14 hours ago

    The US has had a long way to fall. In a wealthy economy can suffer a great deal of public finance abuse: there are many wells that need to be dried up. The progression of the US toward that goal includes, most recently: progressively shifting to ever shorter term notes to finance deficits and large scale monetizing of deficits, such as during the Great Recession and COVID.

    We'll get there. You'll know it's over when you get "bailed in" and the treasury starting minting trillion dollar coins.

  • FredPret 16 hours ago

    Public debt is more like a brake that gets worse and worse really slowly over time.

    And then it suddenly explodes - more and more of the budget goes to interest payments instead of procurement.

    At one point the government has to borrow to make payments on the debt, and then you’ve got a very bad spiral.

    • pfdietz 10 hours ago

      Because the debt is in US dollars, the government will inflate away the debt. So the end game is dollar devaluation, followed by enforced budget discipline because lenders will no longer accept treasury bills.

rldjbpin 4 hours ago

tl;dw/dr - no, but not all sand are made equal, nor costs the same to procure.

crmrc114 20 hours ago

Bonus points for articles that start with a tldr and don't try to bury the lead

  • jzb 19 hours ago

    Note that "bury the lede" isn't really about "make the reader get to the end to find out the answer" but when a reporter/writer emphasizes the wrong part of a story in the intro then you'd say they buried the lede. Like, if the first graf is all about a politician attending a ribbon-cutting ceremony in Podunk, IL and then in the third graf you have "at the rally, he called for all left-handed people to be put in jail" then you've buried the lede.

    If you have in the first graf "so-and-so proposed a radical, and illegal, prosecution of a minority group" it's not burying the lede to make the reader get to the third graf to find out it's against left-handed people. Annoying, perhaps, but not technically burying the lede. :)

    • alickz 4 hours ago

      is graf short for paragraph? i haven't seen that before

    • hinkley 18 hours ago

      Burying the lede is in the same spirit as “the real wtf was…”

  • anamexis 20 hours ago

    FYI it's "bury the lede," a lede being the introductory section of a news story.

    • Maxatar 20 hours ago

      The word "lede" was introduced in the 1970s as an alternative spelling for the word "lead" to resolve ambiguity between the leading paragraph of an article and the metal "lead" which was used in typesetting. It didn't even become popular until the 1980s.

      In fact, prior to the 1980s, it was indeed spelled "bury the lead". Here for example is an excerpt from a book about newswriting from the 1970s which uses "lead" as the spelling:

      https://books.google.ca/books?id=3IxbAAAAMAAJ&q=%22bury+the+...

      • havblue 18 hours ago

        Meanwhile, the group "Led Zeppelin" also avoided the ambiguous spelling to prevent people from pronouncing their name "leed zeppelin". You can't win with lead.

        • btown 17 hours ago

          Huh, didn't know that! Via https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Led_Zeppelin#Formation:_1966%E... :

          > One account of how the new band's name was chosen held that Moon and Entwistle had suggested that a supergroup with Page and Beck would go down like a "lead balloon", an idiom for being very unsuccessful or unpopular.[21] The group dropped the 'a' in lead at the suggestion of [manager] Peter Grant, so that those unfamiliar with the term would not pronounce it "leed".[22] The word "balloon" was replaced by "zeppelin", a word which, according to music journalist Keith Shadwick, brought "the perfect combination of heavy and light, combustibility and grace" to Page's mind.[21]

          It certainly doesn't help that in a rock context, "lead guitar" is very much pronounced with a long e! And one could be forgiven for thinking that a formation of flying things would necessarily have one member in the lead position. I'm glad they had the foresight to keep us from being led astray!

          • samatman 17 hours ago

            > And one could be forgiven for thinking that a formation of flying things would necessarily have one member in the lead position.

            Indeed. In which case you would have the lead zeppelin, and the led zeppelins.

            • btown 14 hours ago

              Now that's what I call burying the lead!

    • sharkjacobs 20 hours ago

      I would argue that there's no reason to continue misspelling "lead" as "lede" outside of a context where you are worried about conflating the "lead" paragraph with the "lead" piece of metal which was used as a spacer between words in a Linotype machine

      • jzb 19 hours ago

        It's not a misspelling, it's jargon. FWIW I prefer it and I think it's valuable to preserve in part because people who dig into it a bit learn about the history of the term and practice of putting publications (especially newspapers) together.

        • Maxatar 19 hours ago

          You can prefer one spelling over another, absolutely, but it's a bit too strong to say someone using the actual word "lead" is incorrect.

          • jzb 19 hours ago

            Oh, I wouldn't correct someone for saying "lead" -- or "intro" or any other variant that makes sense. Leed is right out, though.

        • keybored 19 hours ago

          If the choice is betwixt overloading a morpheme and having two distinct I shall take the latter.

      • ziddoap 19 hours ago

        >I would argue that there's no reason to continue misspelling "lead" as "lede"

        Does it still count as misspelling when "lede" is in the dictionary (Merriam Websters & Cambridge & Oxford)?

        Pretty sure it's just a word at that point, right?

    • lmm 11 hours ago

      That's a pretentious, anachronistic affectation - the phrase predates the use of "lede".

  • colechristensen 20 hours ago

    The Washington Post headline:

    >'The Eagle Has Landed' – Two Men Walk on the Moon

    That is the entire story, in the headline as it should be. I want to know more! The first sentence should add the most relevant added information.

    It shouldn't be "As a child Neil Armstrong always dreamed about..." burying the next most important detail 2/3 through the article. The importance/relevance/interest should start high, end low. Inverted pyramid.

    • SoftTalker 19 hours ago

      That's the "inverted pyramid" organization that is (or was) taught in journalism. The way it was explained to me is: imagine the reader stops at the headline. Or after reading the first sentence. Or after the first paragraph, etc. In any case, they should have read the most important facts of the story up that point.

    • bregma 19 hours ago

      Holy cow, don't look for recipes on the web. If you're luck any ingredients and instructions are only 2/3 through. More often 23 pages through.

      • cole-k 18 hours ago

        Your comment and my response exist in so many places on the internet, but I wanted to point out that most of the web-based recipes I use have a convenient "jump to recipe" button. I won't attempt to explain what SEO/copyright/whatever reasons there are for the excess prose at the beginning, though.

        What bothers me more about these sites is how heavyweight they can feel even with ads stripped. I wonder if they all use a similar, bloated JS widget that my phone cannot run smoothly.

      • pinkmuffinere 19 hours ago

        I’ve been using this app “just the recipe” to avoid this problem. It’s not perfect, but saves me 90% of the time. I think I found it on hn originally.

        I have no connection to the app, aside from being a happy user

    • roca 19 hours ago

      I have a theory that a lot of journalists really wanted to be novelists. When they get a chance to write a long-form article they can't resist the urge to flex their stylistic muscles; "look at me, I'm a Serious Writer".

      • colechristensen 14 hours ago

        I was talking to a journalist who worked for a major venue and the metric she cared about was number of seconds a user stayed on an article. She didn't say "this is the most important..." she just talked about it for 20 minutes and the different results from different demographics and link sources so it was quite obvious.

        So that's what journalists are measured by these days apparently, how long a piece can keep the attention of a user.

        Ironically she worked for what I would consider one of the best players in terms of not writing attention grabbing BS. (I won't mention which here)

uberduper 12 hours ago

Frackers bought the Kermit Sand Dunes in Texas 7 or 8 years ago cause the sand there was ideal for fracking.

gorfian_robot 11 hours ago

there are lots of types of sand for specific purposes just like say different kinds of wood. unfortunately while we can essentially 'farm' certain kinds of wood that really isn't possible for sand.

  • krisoft 3 hours ago

    > unfortunately while we can essentially 'farm' certain kinds of wood that really isn't possible for sand.

    The linked article demonstrates this to be false.

tonetegeatinst 16 hours ago

So I'm confused. How are we to differentiate sand for semiconductor from sand for fiber optics? Or say sand for windows?

  • throwup238 10 hours ago

    The sand is first screened to separate out larger objects, then washed to eliminate clay/silt/fine particles. Then it goes through a couple more steps to separate out quartz, magnetic minerals, etc before finally batches are tested for silicon dioxide content and impurities using xray fluoroscopy and other spectroscopy methods. The purer a batch is, the higher end the customer.

    Most localities can’t produce sand good enough for semiconductors or optics because they contain impurities that are too hard to remove so most of it is used for concrete or glass.

dyauspitr 8 hours ago

I didn’t exactly understand the take away from this video. In the first test he does, the river sand concrete is three times stronger than the desert sand concrete, but in the second test, the desert sand concrete is 10% stronger than the river sand concrete. What exactly is going on?

  • NeoTar 5 hours ago

    It's normalising for different things.

    If you normalise for the the same ratio of cement / water / gravel / sand then sharp-sand (crushed rocks) is stronger.

    If you normalise for workability (i.e. the concrete flows and can be worked easily) you need to add additional water to sharp-sand, which means that the smooth-sand (e.g. river-rocks) end up stronger.

  • kilna 4 hours ago

    He explained it in the video. The amount of water was adjusted so the viscosity (well, workability) was identical between the samples in the second test. Less water in concrete has a huge positive influence on strength, and rough sand needs more water to be workable. Thus, for comparably workable samples, rounded sand concrete with less water was actually stronger.

throw0101b 20 hours ago

The book mentioned, The World in a Grain: The Story of Sand and How It Transformed Civilization by Vince Beiser:

> The World in a Grain is the compelling true story of the hugely important and diminishing natural resource that grows more essential every day, and of the people who mine it, sell it, build with it--and sometimes, even kill for it. It's also a provocative examination of the serious human and environmental costs incurred by our dependence on sand, which has received little public attention. Not all sand is created equal: Some of the easiest sand to get to is the least useful. Award-winning journalist Vince Beiser delves deep into this world, taking readers on a journey across the globe, from the United States to remote corners of India, China, and Dubai to explain why sand is so crucial to modern life. Along the way, readers encounter world-changing innovators, island-building entrepreneurs, desert fighters, and murderous sand pirates. The result is an entertaining and eye-opening work, one that is both unexpected and involving, rippling with fascinating detail and filled with surprising characters.

* https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/36950075-the-world-in-a-...

  • WillAdams 19 hours ago

    Another book on this is:

    _Material World: The Six Raw Materials That Shape Modern Civilization_ by Ed Conway

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/112974899-material-world

    >Sand, salt, iron, copper, oil, and lithium. These fundamental materials have created empires, razed civilizations, and fed our ingenuity and greed for thousands of years. Without them, our modern world would not exist, and the battle to control them will determine our future

    • lazide 9 hours ago

      Lithium seems like a weird one to add to that list. It definitely hasn’t been important for thousands of years. Potassium or Nitrates are a more likely addition.

kylehotchkiss 19 hours ago

The first time I heard about this, I wondered why we didn't just blast desert sand at itself to rough it up to give it better properties. Sure it takes some energy but the sand mafia probably isn't getting cheaper.

  • bee_rider 19 hours ago

    It turns we’re all in the pocket of big sand. Which I guess is better than having big sand in our pockets, as that would scratch up our phones. Then, we’d need new phones, or at least new phone screens… either way, big sand wins!

    • kylehotchkiss 19 hours ago

      you're forgetting how much damage it'd do in the charging port!

  • telotortium 19 hours ago

    That would probably cause the sand to become smoother.

  • mschuster91 18 hours ago

    > I wondered why we didn't just blast desert sand at itself to rough it up to give it better properties.

    The grain size of desert (or most maritime) sand is already far too small, and if you blast it to pieces it will get even smaller - too small to be used for concrete.

undebuggable 16 hours ago

Didn't know artisanal sand is a thing.

manav 19 hours ago

Don't we have to move to GaN anyway?

chris_wot 17 hours ago

So… this is really about costs? If costs increase for more environmentally destructive sand production, then other sand production gets relatively cheaper… and as he says, industry starts to use more appropriate materials that suddenly become relatively comparable in terms of costs to concrete?

I’m not an engineer or an economist, does this sound like a fair summary?

jiveturkey 18 hours ago

I recently bought his book. It's as great as you'd expect it to be.

luxuryballs 18 hours ago

I just got back from the beach and my car is full of it if anyone needs some.

itsdrewmiller 19 hours ago

Betteridge's law never fails! (At least in this case the author immediately answers the question.)

breakingrules3 20 hours ago

the world is running out of sand if some crooked politician and his cronies can profit off of it. notice the pattern.

justinator 19 hours ago

We're running out of most everything, in a very The Limits to Growth/World3 kinda of way.

  • WillAdams 19 hours ago

    Isaac Asimov was an early writer on this, noting that if the earth's crust was converted into biomass the limiting element was phosphorous --- look at USDA photos of food crops grown w/ and w/o fertilizer including that element for a very sobering view.

    Currently, we expend up to 10 calories of petro-chemical energy to get 1 calorie of food energy (depending on food) --- peak oil is still worrisome given how much of the input for fertilizers is from oil.

    Sometime in the last century we crossed over from their being more weight in bony fish in the oceans than shipping tonnage to the latter predominating: https://what-if.xkcd.com/33/

    My grandfather lived in a time when commercial hunting was outlawed --- I worry my children will live in a time when commercial fishing is no longer feasible.

    • citizenpaul 18 hours ago

      >I worry my children will live in a time when commercial fishing is no longer feasible.

      We are already well into it unfortunately. I've seen enough anecdotal evidence from old fishermen that we have already depleted and disrupted the sea biomass so much that it is already changed forever.

      - Old sushi chefs talking about how there are numerous fish they can no longer get at any price that were common when they were young.

      - Old fishing photos show smaller and smaller "prize" catches over time.

      - Old fisherman talking about how they used to fish by slapping oars at the bay then simply hand/net catching the fish types they wanted near shore.

      - Old whalers talking about how they could simply go out and pick what type of large catch they wanted and bring it back. Now they can go days or weeks without a single catch of anything.

    • pfdietz 10 hours ago

      There is nothing special about petrochemical energy when it comes to growing food. We could run the agricultural system on other energy sources. In the US, the total fraction of energy used for agriculture is about 1%. We use more energy cooking food than growing it.

      • lazide 8 hours ago

        Hydrocarbons contain massive quantities of easily liberated energy and large quantities of easily liberated hydrogen.

        Which are then easily and economically converted to ammonia to power the largest single form of fertilizer used in the world - nitrogen fertilizer, in the form of ammonium nitrate and equivalents. [https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haber_process]

        10’s of millions of tons/year are produced right now.

        That process alone is responsible for likely at least 50% of the human population increase since it was invented, literally billions of people.

        It is much harder to get there with any other form of energy, albeit not impossible.

        • pfdietz 2 hours ago

          It's harder, but if one looks at the externalities from fossil fuel consumption, it's actually cheaper to use renewable energy now.

          Hydrogen for ammonia production is very cheaply storable (underground, like natural gas is stored) and would provide a large dispatchable demand to ease integration of renewables into the economy, smoothing over long timescale intermittency.

          In any case, because the energy used for agriculture is so relatively small, if the economy as a whole can get off fossil fuels, agriculture certainly can as well.

          • lazide 2 hours ago

            Since neither the general economy nor agriculture has gotten anywhere near getting off fossil fuels yet, that is assuming a lot isn’t it?

            Even if electrical grid needs are 100% renewable, that is just a couple percent of most economies energy usage.

            • pfdietz 2 hours ago

              You're skating perilously close to "if something hasn't happened yet, it can't ever happen". This is not valid reasoning.

              If the global economy can't get off fossil fuels, we're incredibly fucked, so I suggest there's nothing to be lost by assuming the problem is solvable.

              • lazide 2 hours ago

                And you’re skating awfully close to the ‘if something could be theoretically solved, that means it is already solved’. That is also not valid reasoning.

                I’m pointing out that the scope and scale of the actual changes that need to happen is so large that it will require a lot of work to solve it, in practice. Without everyone (well, 90% probably) starving to death, anyway.

                Should we be starting? Yes. But it will require actual concerted effort and significant tradeoffs. And a lot of time.

                We’ve been working very hard to get to this point for a century now.

                • pfdietz an hour ago

                  Now you're confusing "solvable" with "solved". Different concepts!

                  Of course a lot of work would be needed. The work, however, would be justified and very likely rewarded. There don't appear to be any showstoppers that would prevent it from succeeding.

                  The ultimate problem is one of collective action, internalizing costs that are now externalized. We've solved problems like this before, globally for example with the ban on CFCs. Here the costs and stakes are even higher.

                  Fossil fuel use will ultimately drive some countries near the equator to such levels of heating that life will become difficult or impossible. India and Pakistan have nuclear weapons, so they (particularly India, which has hydrogen bombs and a much larger economy) can threaten to kick over the global card table if the problem is not effectively addressed.

                  • lazide an hour ago

                    The issue is that many players are already defacto bankrupt (from a people starving to death/poverty perspective) even while externalizing the costs of fossil fuels.

                    Like India, Pakistan, many parts of China, Russia, etc.

                    So easy to say, hard to do. And it’s hard to say that threatening to nuke everyone is going to apply the right kind of leverage, if say India is already starting to drown. Wouldn’t it be better for everyone else then to take their nukes (or nuke them in advance) and let them drown?

                    Even if others haven’t gotten that far in their line of thinking, I’m guessing India sure has.

                    The CFC coalition was nothing compared to what will be required to deal with this situation - and notably, the CFC issue still isn’t really solved. Just mostly under control.

                    We’ll see how this plays out.

    • hinkley 18 hours ago

      The best solution we have so far is outlawing all fishing in certain areas of the ocean. Picked well, the fish are safe there to breed and recover population numbers, and you only harvest schools that leave the exclusion zone due to crowding.

rpigab 19 hours ago

> If we use the US Department of Agriculture’s soil textural triangle, sand is any granular material that is at least 85% sand…

Cool, I just added a single grain of sand to a tonne of snow, now I have a tonne of sand. How convenient.

  • ses1984 19 hours ago

    If you add a single grain of sand to a tonne of snow, it’s not 85% sand.

    • hinkley 18 hours ago

      Seems somebody slept through Intro to Logic.

  • pinkmuffinere 19 hours ago

    I don’t understand how you got that conclusion — 1 grain of sand is not 85% of the [ton of snow + 1 grain sand]

    • sakras 17 hours ago

      I think OP wanted to construct “sand by induction”, but I also think you need more than one grain. If you have 9 grains of sand and add one snowflake, you now have something that’s 90% sand and is therefore 10 grains of sand. Take your 10 grains of sand and add another snowflake to create 11 grains of sand. Continue with each snowflake one by one, and you’ve inductively created a sand pile.

      • timando 14 hours ago

        You don't need to construct sand by induction. Just notice that snow has the right particle size to be considered sand.

  • fwip 19 hours ago

    How does that one grain become 85% of a tonne?

Havoc 20 hours ago

I wonder if the desert kind of sand that isn’t suitable for construction can be used for those thermal mass sand batteries.

Seems like an obvious solution for storage to me but haven’t heard anything on that front

  • db48x 20 hours ago

    You didn’t watch the video.

JoeAltmaier 17 hours ago

The whole idea of making your own sand is not sound. It will cost more, perhaps many times more. Seems clear when you think about it: hard to beat the cost of 'natural' sand because you just drive over and load it up. Add any more to that process, it's gonna go up in price. Including crushing rock etc - energy-intensive, then sieving. All add cost over and above, well, just hauling.

And vague comments about 'couldn't find the science behind river sand being less useful' (because it's rounded not jagged). That's no kind of science.

This guy is lauded but I"m not so sure he's someone to listen to. "I hit some rocks in my garage and made my own sand!" isn't any kind of interesting. At what cost? At what scale? It's all about money, baby. Anything that doesn't add up cost is just storytelling.

  • ChuckMcM 17 hours ago

    Did you watch the entire video? I ask because Grady discusses EXACTLY this point.

    He explains that the whole 'more expensive' thing is really just noting the actual cost of sand versus ignoring the externalized costs of mining it. When you dig up a river bed there is a cost there that isn't necessarily reflected in the cost of the sand you mined from there, sometimes because that cost is passed on to someone else who has to remediate the site after you mined it (like taxpayers). He empirically points out that different sands need a different water/cement ratio and also points out that the papers on sand use in concrete understand that. The 'bug' seems to be that people just add 'x' water to the mix and if the sand changes they might get different results.

  • emilecantin 17 hours ago

    Haven't read the article, but I watched the video. He goes on to say that it's not the full story, and he also does some tests where instead of optimizing for a particular water ratio in the mix, he optimizes for a specific texture when mixed, which is termed "workability". If you keep "workability" constant, you can put much less water in the mix, resulting in a stronger concrete when cured.