• aeronmelon@lemmy.worldM
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    15 days ago

    The Imperial Sugar refinery in Texas had a building that was literally just piles of sugar. Depending on how recently they had received a shipment, it was either filled to the gills or almost empty.

    There was also an incident in the 1990s when one of the doors collapsed, spilling sugar into the parking lot.

    • BanMe@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      People familiar with agriculture won’t find this odd at all, soybeans and corn are stored in silos and grain bins and moved to semis and train cars and then buildings like this. I’m honestly not sure how else people think this is done… it doesn’t grow in packet form on the sugarcane plant.

      • dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de
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        15 days ago

        I mean you’d expect it to be stored in silos when it’s delivered I guess. For products made I would have assumed it would’ve stored in large tanks or more silos.

        The Kellogg factory near me has delivery’s pumped into silos which connect to the factory.

        You sound a little insulting with your framing. Like I’m sure there are things you have no fucking clue how it works, but I wouldn’t judge you for it.

        • Duranie@leminal.space
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          15 days ago

          Without digging deeper to find out what this salt was purposed for, they also make salt for non food products, and likely non human ingestion as well (animal salt licks and such.)

        • OneOrTheOtherDontAskMe@lemmy.world
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          15 days ago

          You mean you don’t insult the intelligence of people who don’t immediately grasp the reality of a process when confronted with incongruous information they’d attained by being removed from the forces/systems that dictate that process?

          Lame-o

      • Baggie@lemmy.zip
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        15 days ago

        I guess it’s more of a case that you know stuff comes out of the dirt at one end and is stored in piles, and is clean at the other with sanitary packaging. The shock might just be that the later half happens later than you might expect.

        • Duranie@leminal.space
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          15 days ago

          They also make salt products for de-icing roads/sidewalks, so this sale may not have been destined for food.

          • Baggie@lemmy.zip
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            15 days ago

            I completely forgot that was a thing, I live in Australia and we don’t really do that here

    • Deacon@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      Maybe but I’m definitely going to see My Morning Jacket there later this month

  • Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus
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    15 days ago

    I don’t think storing it this way would fly in europe, and our walls are normally more robust than the average US wall.

    The walls themselves are held in place by downwards pressure of the weight of the roof and the part of the wall above, and i’d say that fine grained salt behaves a lot like a liquid, therefore one must assume that the wall must be designed to withstand outward pressure of a liquid with the specific weight of salt. Whoever approved that to that filling height was pretty much lost to brainrot.

    • MintyFresh@lemmy.world
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      15 days ago

      I think it was only meant to be a shed, and not a bin. Like the walls were only meant to hold a roof up. As opposed to a grain silo, where it’s held by the structure itself.

  • Damage@feddit.it
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    15 days ago

    Is that thin wall all there was to hold up the giant mount of salt?