• @egrets@lemmy.world
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    6626 days ago

    At the risk of dispelling the magic, it was very likely just cheap asphalt around Caracas. Over time or under specific conditions, the asphalt separates or undergoes a chemical transformation, and now the road’s covered in slime.

    They repaved the roads and the problem disappeared.

      • @egrets@lemmy.world
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        1526 days ago

        Not sure who pissed in your cereal, but I linked a source when I posted, which included interviews with two people involved with the problem in the 90s.

          • @egrets@lemmy.world
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            26
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            23 days ago

            Ignoring the fact that you’ve moved the goalposts:

            • A local PhD petroleum engineering lecturer who was involved with the issue directly has a working theory.
            • A Texas PhD chemical and petroleum engineering professor agrees it’s likely.
            • It’s further supported by the fact that resurfacing work removed the issue.

            Cherry-picking the words “I speculate” out of the entire article to suggest they’re unfamiliar with the phenomenon and just pontificating conjecturing is deliberately misleading and I suggest you take your own advice.