bookmark_borderSebum

Sebum.mp3
Sebum.mp4
Sebum-Pt-2.mp3
Sebum-Pt-2.mp4
Sebum-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Sebum
(How come?)

[Verse 1]
Secretion
(And regulation)
What more…
(From a poor pour)

[Bridge]
Sebum
(How come?)

[Chorus]
Pours from the pores
(Ample for supple)
Pours from the pores
(Pro protection)
Save me from infection!

[Verse 1]
Secretion
(And regulation)
Perspiration
(Evaporation)

[Bridge]
Sebum
(How come?)

[Chorus]
Pours from the pores
(Ample for supple)
Pours from the pores
(Pro protection)
Save me from infection!

[Outro]
Pour from each pore
(Pour some more)
Oh, the pores pour
(Pore some more)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
The primary roles of the pores in the skin are for secretion and temperature regulation:
* Releasing Sweat: Tiny sweat pores, connected to eccrine glands, release perspiration to the surface of the skin. The evaporation of this sweat is essential for cooling the body down and regulating core temperature (thermoregulation).
* Secreting Sebum (Oil): Larger oil pores are openings for hair follicles and sebaceous glands, which produce and secrete an oily substance called sebum. Sebum lubricates and protects the skin, keeping it healthy and supple.
* Excretion of Waste: Pores allow for the elimination of minor amounts of metabolic waste, such as nitrogenous compounds, via sweat.

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderA Different Song

A-Different-Song.mp3
A-Different-Song.mp4
A-Different-Song-Pt-2.mp3
A-Different-Song-Pt-2.mp4
A-Different-Song-intro.mp3

[Intro]
A different song
(It didn’t take long….)

[Verse 1]
Have you heard
(That one before)
Gettin’ bored….
(There must be more)

[Bridge]
More, more, more
(Soul to the core)
A different song!
(That didn’t take long)

[Chorus]
Shake up this place
(Stir up the race)
Make a movement
(Make your move meant)

[Verse 2]
Of all the nerve
(Throw us a curve)
So that we can swerve
(A dance all deserve)

[Bridge]
What’s the score
(We want more!)
More, more, more
(Soul to the core)
A different song!
(That didn’t take long)

[Chorus]
Shake up this place
(Stir up the race)
Make a movement
(Make your move meant)

[Outro]
What’s the score
(Have you had enough)
We want more
(We’re hangin’ tough)
More, more, more
(Soul to the core)
Just for reference
(In essence)
This song is original
(From the soul in all)

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderSponge

Sponge-Best-Of.mp3
Sponge-Best-Of.mp4
Sponge.mp3
Sponge.mp4
Sponge-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Sponge
(Plunge)
And soak it up

[Verse 1]
Time to confess
(What a mess)
Broom and bucket
(Say “funk it”)

[Bridge]
Sponge
(Plunge)
And soak it up

[Chorus]
Capillary action
(Offer satisfaction)
And did I mention…
(Surface tension)

[Verse 2]
Suck up and soak
(It’s no joke)
Add adhesion
(And cohesion)

[Bridge]
[Chorus]
[Bridge]
How about retention?
Sponge
(Plunge)
Mop the mess
(So there’s less)

[Outro]
Capillary action
(Offer satisfaction)
And did I mention…
(Surface tension)
We’ll work this spill
(Until….)
It’s dry
(We try)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
The pores of a sponge work through a combination of capillary action, surface tension, and the fundamental structure of the sponge material, which collectively allow the sponge to absorb and retain liquid.

1. Capillary Action
Capillary action is the primary mechanism that pulls water into the sponge’s pores.

* Adhesion: Water molecules are attracted to the solid material of the sponge (adhesion).
* Cohesion: Water molecules are also attracted to each other (cohesion).

The narrow, interconnected channels (pores) within the sponge provide a large surface area for this adhesion to occur. The adhesive forces between the water and the sponge walls are stronger than the cohesive forces within the water itself. This imbalance causes the water to climb up into the tiny pores, seemingly defying gravity.

2. Surface Tension
Surface tension plays a role in keeping the water inside the sponge once it has been absorbed. The water forms menisci (curved surfaces) across the openings of the tiny pores. The surface tension of these water surfaces creates an inward pressure that helps hold the water within the sponge’s structure, preventing it from simply flowing out immediately.

3. Elasticity and Squeezing
The sponge’s matrix is a flexible, elastic material.
* Absorption: When a dry sponge is dipped in water, the existing air pressure is replaced by water drawn in by capillary action, filling the voids.
* Retention: The combination of capillary action and surface tension holds the water inside the material’s elastic structure.
* Release: To get the water out, you must apply mechanical force (squeezing) to physically compress the sponge material. This pressure overcomes the forces of adhesion and surface tension, forcing the water out of the pores. When you release the pressure, the sponge springs back to its original shape, drawing air back into the pores, making it ready to absorb liquid again.

In summary, the pores act as a network of tiny capillaries that use basic physics principles to draw in, hold, and release liquid upon demand.

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderRoll of the Whole

Roll-of-the-Whole.mp3
Roll-of-the-Whole.mp4
Roll-of-the-Whole-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp3
Roll-of-the-Whole-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp4
Roll-of-the-Whole-intro.mp3

[Intro]
But there’s a hole in it
(The role of the hole)
Amplify the music
(The roll of the whole)

[Verse 1]
A resonant chamber
(Bass-reflex)
A re-remainder
(Strokin’ necks)

[Bridge]
Hey! What can I say….

[Chorus]
“But there’s a hole in it”
(The role of the hole)
Amplify the music
(The roll of the whole)

[Verse 2]
So, to be heard
(Above the herd)
For the love of sound
(And, gettin’ down)

[Bridge]
Hey! What can I say….

[Chorus]
“But there’s a hole in it”
(The role of the hole)
Amplify the music
(The roll of the whole)

[Bridge]
Hey! What can I say….
(The best way to play astray)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
I misspoke (Is it broke)

[Outro]
“There’s a hole in it”
(The role of the hole)
Amplify the music
(The roll of the whole)
Make it thick n’ or slick
(Smooth or in the groove)
The heart of rock n’ roll
(The role of the whole hole)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
The hole in an acoustic guitar, known as the soundhole, plays a crucial role in amplifying and shaping the instrument’s sound. It functions as a “breathing port” for the internal resonant chamber, essential for the instrument’s ability to be heard without electrical amplification.

Air Resonance (Helmholtz Resonance)
The guitar body acts as a resonant chamber, similar to a bass-reflex speaker or an empty bottle when air is blown across its top.

* The vibrating strings transfer energy through the bridge to the guitar’s top (soundboard), causing the entire top surface to vibrate.
* This vibration moves the air inside the body, creating variations in air pressure.
* The air mass inside the body, in combination with the volume of air in and around the soundhole, vibrates at a specific natural frequency, which is called the Helmholtz resonance.
* This air resonance enhances the sound radiation, particularly in the lower frequencies (bass), making those notes louder and fuller than the strings could produce alone.

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderWaterproof

Waterproof.mp3
Waterproof.mp4
Waterproof-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp3
Waterproof-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp4
Waterproof-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Good to the last drop
(Drop)

[Verse 1]
The Snake River
(Fails to deliver)
Diluted subsidies
(Causing tragedies)

[Bridge]
Dam the salmon
(Dam ’em, damn ’em)

[Chorus]
Mead and Powell runnin’ low
(How much longer… I dunno)
Just a drip (Barely a flow)
The last drop (Oh, whoa woe)

[Verse 2]
Biscayne Aquifer
(Situation’s more than dire)
Drowning in the salt
(Do you wonder whose fault?)

[Bridge]
The primate climate
Takes on the hairless ape
(Shape)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
Mead and Powell runnin’ low
(How much longer… I dunno)
Just a drip (Barely a flow)
The last drop (Oh, whoa woe)

[Bridge]
The primate climate
Takes on the hairless ape
(Shape)

[Outro]
The primate climate
Extract a confession
(From the extractionists)
It’s the human lesson
(By extinctionalists)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE

America’s Water Crisis Is Already Here — and Climate Change Is Driving It

The U.S. is running out of fresh water, and the evidence is everywhere:

🔥 Colorado River Collapse

  • Lake Mead & Lake Powell at historic lows

  • Forced federal water cuts

  • Hydropower at Hoover & Glen Canyon at risk

  • 40 million people affected

🌡️ Why?
Climate change is accelerating aridification:

  • Vanishing snowpack

  • Earlier melt

  • Extreme evaporation

  • Soils absorbing water before it reaches rivers
    A 2023 study found warming has drained the equivalent of an entire Lake Mead from the basin since 2000.

🐟 Lower Snake River Dams Myth
They produce <4% of the NW’s power, offer almost no storage, require huge subsidies, and are driving salmon toward extinction. Calling dam removal “climate craziness” is pure politics — not science.

🌊 Florida Is in Trouble Too
Sea-level rise is pushing saltwater into Florida’s drinking water aquifers.
Tampa is already buying 10 million gallons/day — something officials say was “very rare” before this year.

🚨 Different regions, same crisis:
Climate-driven hydrological disruption is hitting reservoirs, aquifers, ecosystems, energy grids, and farms — now, not decades from now.

This is the new water reality in America. And it’s accelerating.

* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

What Can I Do?
The single most important action you can take to help address the climate crisis is simple: stop burning fossil fuels. There are numerous actions you can take to contribute to saving the planet. Each person bears the responsibility to minimize pollution, discontinue the use of fossil fuels, reduce consumption, and foster a culture of love and care. The Butterfly Effect illustrates that a small change in one area can lead to significant alterations in conditions anywhere on the globe. Hence, the frequently heard statement that a fluttering butterfly in China can cause a hurricane in the Atlantic. Be a butterfly and affect the world.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

 

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderWith a Grain of Salt

With-a-Grain-of-Salt.mp3
With-a-Grain-of-Salt.mp4
With-a-Grain-of-Salt-Reggae.mp3
With-a-Grain-of-Salt-Reggae.mp4
ith-a-Grain-of-Salt-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp3

With-a-Grain-of-Salt-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Halt!
(What?)
You’ve gotta take that …
(With a grain of salt)

[Verse 1]
Intrusion
(Into your mind)
Intrusion
(Time to remind)

[Chorus]
Halt!
(What?)
You’ve gotta take that …
(With a grain of salt)

[Bridge]
’cause whether you like it or not
(That’s what you wrought)
That’s what you brought
(That’s what we’ve got)
[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo]

[Verse 2]
Are you thinking
(The land is sinking)
Meanwhile, the rising tide…
(Can we ride)

[Chorus]
Halt!
(What?)
You’ve gotta take that …
(With a grain of salt)

[Bridge]
’cause whether you like it or not
(That’s what you wrought)
That’s what you brought
(That’s what we’ve got)
It’s a saline situation
(Burst a sublime time)
It’s a humane violation
(Crime of all time)

[Outro]
What?
(Exalt)
You’ve gotta take that …
(With a grain of salt)
A salty attitude
(Lack of gratitude)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE: Florida: Freshwater on the Brink
Rising seas are pushing saltwater into South Florida’s drinking-water aquifers, including the Biscayne Aquifer. Less rainfall, reduced river flow, and heavy groundwater pumping all accelerate the intrusion.

Tampa just had to start buying 10 million gallons of water per day — something officials call “very rare,” especially this early in the year. Saltwater intrusion and declining flows are forcing emergency water measures far earlier than in past decades.

* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

What Can I Do?
The single most important action you can take to help address the climate crisis is simple: stop burning fossil fuels. There are numerous actions you can take to contribute to saving the planet. Each person bears the responsibility to minimize pollution, discontinue the use of fossil fuels, reduce consumption, and foster a culture of love and care.

The Climate Crisis: Violent Rain | Deadly Humid Heat | Health Collapse | Extreme Weather Events | Insurance | Trees and Deforestation | Soil | Rising Sea Level | Food and Water | Updates

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Porous

Also found on the album “Reggae Getaway

bookmark_borderIt’s Got Holes

Its-Got-Holes-Best-Of.mp3
Its-Got-Holes-Best-Of.mp4
Its-Got-Holes.mp3
Its-Got-Holes.mp4
Its-Got-Holes-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(After all…)
Like a bowling ball
(It’s got holes)
… and it rolls

[Bridge]
So, go…
(Give ‘er a throw)
See if you can get ‘er to talk
(… if you can get ‘er to walk)
Let me know
(If you strike a blow)

[Refrain]
Give ‘er a roll
(Strike up the band)
Rock n’ roll’s soul
(Takes command)

[Bridge]
So, go…
(Give ‘er a throw)
See if you can get ‘er to talk
(… if you can get ‘er to walk)
Let me know
(If you strike a blow)

[Refrain]
Give ‘er a roll
(Strike up the band)
Rock n’ roll’s soul
(Takes command)

[Outro]
So, go…
(Give ‘er a throw)
Stay in your lane….
(Or go insane?)
Heard of talk the talk
(Took a walk for a walk)
And, hear’s the thing
(I tried to make that thing sing)
Gave ‘er a go…
(… trying to strike a blow)

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderAbsorption

Absorption.mp3
Absorption.mp4
Absorption-Pt-2.mp3
Absorption-Pt-2.mp4
Absorption-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Mass consumption
(Absorption, tion, tion)
Sponging off the Earth
(Since our birth)

[Verse 1]
Where we begin…
(Is soakin’ it in)
Suck up even more
(Than ever before)

[Chorus]
Mass consumption
(Human absorption)
Sponging off the Earth
(Since our birth)

[Bridge]
Mass consumption
(Absorption)
Sponging off the Earth
(Since our birth)

[Verse 2]
Where we continue
(You soakin’ it, too)
Suck up every bit
(Out of habit)

[Chorus]
Mass consumption
(Human absorption)
Sponging off the Earth
(Since our birth)

[Bridge]
Mass consumption
(Absorption)
Sponging off the Earth
(Since our birth)

[Outro]
Mass consumption
(Reduction)
If we want an Earth
(For future birth)
Reduce the pace
(Of the human race)
Mass consumption
(Solution)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
Mass consumption is the root engine of environmental exploitation and anthropogenic climate change.
It’s not just the industries themselves—it’s the economic model built on endless growth, disposable goods, and ever-rising demand. Every product extracted, manufactured, shipped, and discarded carries a carbon and ecological cost. As long as our global systems reward consumption without limits, ecosystems will continue to be degraded, resources depleted, and greenhouse gases pumped into the atmosphere.

Real climate solutions require more than cleaner technology—they demand rethinking consumption patterns, redefining prosperity, and designing an economy that values sustainability over excess.

* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

What Can I Do?
The single most important action you can take to help address the climate crisis is simple: stop burning fossil fuels. There are numerous actions you can take to contribute to saving the planet. Each person bears the responsibility to minimize pollution, discontinue the use of fossil fuels, reduce consumption, and foster a culture of love and care. The Butterfly Effect illustrates that a small change in one area can lead to significant alterations in conditions anywhere on the globe. Hence, the frequently heard statement that a fluttering butterfly in China can cause a hurricane in the Atlantic. Be a butterfly and affect the world.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

 

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderPour Us

Pour-Us.mp3
Pour-Us.mp4
Pour-Us-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp3
Pour-Us-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp4
Pour-Us-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Pour us
(Watch us flow)
Pour us
(Here we go)

[Verse 1]
No need
(To pity us)
No greed
(Among us)

[Chorus]
Pour us
(Watch us flow)
Pour us
(Here we go)

[Bridge]
Soul’s niche
Love rich

[Verse 2]
Live life
(Vigorous)
Off strife
(Vociferous)

[Chorus]
Pour us
(Watch us flow)
Pour us
(Here we go)

[Bridge]
Oh, oh, oh
Luck’s (glitch)
Soul’s (niche)
Love (rich)

[Chorus]
Pour us
(Watch us flow)
Pour us
(Here we go)

[Outro]
Oh, oh, oh
(Know, know, know)
Luck’s (glitch)
Soul’s (niche)
Love (rich)
Love of love
(Of love, love)
Let love flow
(Go, go, go)
Pour us some more
(Let love endure)

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderPoor Us

Poor-Us-Best-Of.mp3
Poor-Us-Best-Of.mp4
Poor-Us.mp3
Poor-Us.mp4
Poor-Us-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Rained on our parade
(Reigned on our charade)

[Verse 1]
Shall we have
(A pity party)
As we form
(… a storm)

[Bridge]
Rained on our parade
(Reigned on our charade)

[Chorus]
We brought the rain
(Poor us)
We wrought the pain
(Poor us)

[Verse 2]
As we feel
(Sorry for ourselves)
Our storm’s real
(Both health and wealth)

[Bridge]
Rained on our parade
(Reigned on our charade)

[Chorus]
We brought the rain
(Poor us)
We wrought the pain
(Poor us)

[Bridge]
Rained on our parade
(Reigned on our charade)

[Outro]
Watching the eye
(Cry)
As you and I
(Cry)
Are we porous
(Oh, poor us)
Poor porous

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderSlipped Through

Slipped-Through.mp3
Slipped-Through.mp4
Slipped-Through-Pt-2.mp3
Slipped-Through-Pt-2.mp4
Slipped-Through-Pt-3.mp3
Slipped-Through-Pt-3.mp4
Slipped-Through-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Wisdom sieve
(Take to make)
Live to give

[Refrain]
Love slipped through
(To you)
Love will do
(What love will do)
If we want it to…..

[Bridge]
Wisdom sieve
(Let the love flow…)
… through you…
(Take to make)
Live to give
(There you go)

[Refrain]
Love slipped through
(To you)
Love will do
(What love will do)
If we want it to…..

[Bridge]
Wisdom sieve
(Let the love flow…)
… through you…
(Take to make)
Live to give
(There you go)

[Refrain]
Love slipped through
(To you)
Love will do
(What love will do)
If we want it to…..

[Outro]
Love slipped through
(Through and through)
Love will do
(What love can do)
If we help it to…..

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderThat Moon

That-Moon.mp3
That-Moon.mp4
That-Moon-Pt-2.mp3
That-Moon-Pt-2.mp4
That-Moon-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Did you see that moon
(Reflecting some sun)
A sign that soon
(Another cycle is run)

[Bridge]
Are the phases
(Phasing you)
… too?
Not surprising
(There’s a full moon rising)

[Refrain]
Did you see that moon
(Reflecting some sun)
A sign that soon
(Another cycle is run)

[Bridge]
Are the phases
(Phasing you)
… too?
Not surprising
(There’s a full moon rising)

[Refrain]
Did you see that moon
(Reflecting some sun)
A sign that soon
(Another cycle is run)

[Bridge]
Are the phases
(Phasing you)
… too?
Not surprising
(There’s a full moon rising)
A bit sunlit in the night…
(By the light of the moon)

[Outro]
Always amazes
(Watching the phases)
Pass to the past
(Day by day)
Roll to tomorrow
(Today)
A bit sunlit in the night…
(By the light of the moon)
Moon, soon
(Tomorrow will come)
And, my sun…
(We’ll meet face to face)

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
Moonlight is sunlight that reflects off the moon’s surface, which is made of rock and dust. The moon does not produce its own light; it simply reflects the sun’s rays back toward Earth. Our view of the moon changes throughout the month as its position relative to the sun and Earth shifts, creating the different moon phases.

* Sunlight hits the moon: The sun’s light travels through space and strikes the moon’s surface.
* Light bounces off: The moon’s rough surface, including dust, craters, and volcanoes, reflects about 12% of this sunlight.
* Reflected light reaches Earth: This reflected light travels to Earth, and because we are not a source of light in this scenario, we perceive it as moonlight.
* Phases are due to perspective: What we see as different moon shapes (phases) are simply different portions of the sunlit side of the moon that are visible from our vantage point on Earth.

From the album “Porous

bookmark_borderAnother Round

Another-Round.mp3
Another-Round.mp4
Another-Round-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp3
Another-Round-Unplugged-Underground-XXVIII.mp4
Another-Round-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Pour us another round!
(A celebration’s found)
Another year clear

[Refrain]
Another year clear
(A new one’s here)
Pour us another round!
(Another one’s goin’ down)
Down, down, down
(Another year spinnin’ round)

[Bridge]
Pour us another round!
(A celebration’s found)
Another year clear
(A new one’s here)

[Refrain]
Another year clear
(No history to fear)
The last one’s done
(Orbit the sun)
Pour us another round!
(Another one’s goin’ down)
Down, down, down
(Another year spinnin’ round)

[Outro]
[Vocal Solo, A cappella]
Pour us another round!
(A celebration’s found)
Another year clear
(A new one’s here)
Hold to life dear
(A new year’s here)

From the album “Porous

A bonus track from Christmas Bliss

Christmas Home

bookmark_borderHoley Rock

Holey-Rock.mp3
Holey-Rock.mp4
Holey-Rock-Reggae.mp3
Holey-Rock-Reggae.mp4
Holey-Rock-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Can I hear you say “amen”
(Amen!)
Say it again
(Amen!)
Stone, stone, stone
(Rock!)

[Verse 1]
Primarily
(Sedimentary)
Specifically
(Porosity)

[Bridge]
Stone, stone, stone
(Rock!)

[Chorus]
Roll away the sandstone
(Holey rock)
Roll away the limestone
(Holey rock)
… and roll
(Amen!)

[Bridge]
Ya can’t get blood
… from a stone
Stone, stone, stone
(Rock!)

[Verse 2]
Solid as a rock
(Yet floats your boat)
A mental block
(Learned from rote)

[Bridge]
Preferably
(Permeability)
Stone, stone, stone
(Rock!)

[Chorus]
Roll away the sandstone
(Holey rock)
Roll away the limestone
(Holey rock)
… and roll
(Amen!)

[Outro]
Ya can’t get blood
(… from a stone)
Take my word
(Pull the sword)
From the… (Rock!)
Roll away the stone
(Holey rock)
Roll away the stone
(Holey rock)
… and roll away
(Say:)
Amen!

ABOUT THE SCIENCE
The most porous rocks are typically sedimentary rocks, with sandstone and limestone being prime examples. Some volcanic rocks, like pumice, are also extremely porous due to trapped gas bubbles during formation.

Sedimentary rocks
* Sandstone: Often highly porous, allowing it to absorb liquids. The porosity can range from 11–32%.
* Limestone: Also very porous and can readily absorb liquids, though its porosity is often less than sandstone.
* Shale: Can be porous (8–29%) but often lacks permeability, meaning the pores are not interconnected.

Volcanic rocks
* Pumice: This is a very lightweight, porous volcanic rock that is created when gas-rich lava cools rapidly. It’s used in many products because of its absorbent nature.

From the album “Porous
Also found on the album “Reggae Getaway

bookmark_borderHippo-Autonomous

Hippo-Autonomous.mp3
Hippo-Autonomous.mp4
Hippo-Autonomous-Pt-2.mp3
Hippo-Autonomous-Pt-2.mp4
Hippo-Autonomous-Reggae-1.mp3
Hippo-Autonomous-Reggae-1.mp4
Hippo-Autonomous-Reggae-2.mp3
Hippo-Autonomous-Reggae-2.mp4
Hippo-Autonomous-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Here we go
(Hop on the bus)
Hippo-autonomous
(Whoa, whoa, whoa)

[Verse 1]
Come with us
(But this bus…)
Has no driver
(No survivor)

[Bridge]
(Whoa, whoa, whoa)
Here we go
(Hop on the bus)

[Chorus]
Hippo-autonomous
(They said:)
It’s the biggest thing
(Since sliced bread)

[Verse 2]
Hop onboard
(That’s absurd)
There’s no driver
(No survivor)

[Bridge]
(Whoa, whoa, whoa)
Here we go
(Hop on the bus)

[Chorus]
Hippo-autonomous
(They said:)
It’s the biggest thing
(Since sliced bread)

[Outro]
… just ask the dead
(Put their destiny)
On autopilot
(Now they see)
They lost a lot
(Humanity)
Tragedy

From the album “Porous
Also found on the album “Reggae at Play” and “Reggae Getaway