- 4,927
- 2,848
This had been brought up last year, but to no merit. See, the issue is we have basically pulled 1 gigaton for Large Mountain level out of our butts. There's no basis for the value. Why not use Mt. Fuji as a baseline for Large Mountain level?: https://www.data.jma.go.jp/vois/data/tokyo/STOCK/souran_eng/volcanoes/055_fujisan.pdf
Mt. Fuji is one of the most highly-regarded large mountains in both real life and fiction (in fact, I think Mt. Fuji is mentioned more often than all other notable mountains in fictional works), and we literally use Mt. Fuji in our Mountain and Island level requirements article, not to mention Mt. Fuji is probably the only mountain with an actual, reliable volume estimate: 400 km³ according to the Japan Meteorological Agency (an actual Japanese government agency similar to the United States' EPA and NOAA). Using the rock generalization value of 8 j/cm³ for destroying Mt. Fuji (as using basalt would probably remove High 7-A entirely), we can give a fair estimate of 3.2*10^18 joules, equivalent to 764.8183556 megatons of TNT. It may make things a bit more finicky, but it provides a more reliable baseline for High 7-A than 1 gigaton from literally out of thin air.
Mt. Fuji is one of the most highly-regarded large mountains in both real life and fiction (in fact, I think Mt. Fuji is mentioned more often than all other notable mountains in fictional works), and we literally use Mt. Fuji in our Mountain and Island level requirements article, not to mention Mt. Fuji is probably the only mountain with an actual, reliable volume estimate: 400 km³ according to the Japan Meteorological Agency (an actual Japanese government agency similar to the United States' EPA and NOAA). Using the rock generalization value of 8 j/cm³ for destroying Mt. Fuji (as using basalt would probably remove High 7-A entirely), we can give a fair estimate of 3.2*10^18 joules, equivalent to 764.8183556 megatons of TNT. It may make things a bit more finicky, but it provides a more reliable baseline for High 7-A than 1 gigaton from literally out of thin air.