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Old 06-02-2016, 02:30 PM
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ArmySGT. ArmySGT. is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2011
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Quote:
Originally Posted by WallShadow View Post
One type of site that might make a great cover for a bolthole could be a Superfund site loaded with toxic chemicals.
Wait, you say: why would Morrow want to store things in a hazardous environment?
Because, thanks to regular salting of the samples taken by the EPA, the sites would always come up with high levels of toxins, masking the true cleaned-up status of the land--thanks to Morrow fusion and Morrow lasers and Morrow Biofiltration/bioconcentration projects. (Side note: Mushrooms, shellfish, and bamboo have proven to absorb large amounts of toxins and even radioactive particles: some even thrive in a radioactive environment.) And the owners of the ground would be a string of Morrow Corp fronts, handing it off from one "bravely struggling/bravely failing reclamation company" to another, always just managing to keep the status quo, all the effort managing to prevent the leakage into the water table.

I like it...... very creative.

I just generally stick to very rural bolt holes. Land bought under one of the many Morrow Industries corporations for purposes of industry or conservation. Forest Service buildings and BLM buildings are built by civilian contractors after all. The FAA maintains navigation beacons in some very rural, sometimes wilderness locations.

So a Bolt hole is a "Fill" on a map. A location where a former depression or unstable ground has been filled with material from another site, such as an excavation.
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