- Breaking News San Mateo County ninth-graders struggle to stay fit
- Breaking News Food and wine events
- Breaking News Ask Amy: What To Do When the Doctor Isn t in the House
- Breaking News Ed Blonz: Keep your diet normal pre-surgery
Nukes Are No Match for Mother Nature
0 Comments | Insight on the News, July 22, 2003
Byline: John Elvin, INSIGHT
Nukes Are No Match for Mother Nature
As hurricane season approaches, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) gets lots of ideas from the public on how to control such monster storms. The most popular suggestion is to "nuke 'em," followed by various suggestions on using conventional weapons to stun the storms into submission.
NOAA observes on its Website (www.nhc.noaa.gov) that using nuclear weapons against hurricanes is "not a good idea." Among the problems would be radiation, which rapidly would spread to inland areas via the trade winds in the event the hurricane was dissipated.
Most Popular Articles
Most Recent Articles
Chances are good that the hurricane would not be destroyed but would become an even grander whirling and irradiated menace. In an interview with the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, hurricane expert Hugh Willoughby said nuking the big storms actually might increase their power by cranking up their heat. Bombs such as those used in the Iraq war would just be shrugged off by a hurricane, he added.
There are various other ideas for killing hurricanes, but NOAA doesn't find any of them practical. Some that might work have adverse environmental impacts, such as the notion of cooling the ocean's surface to deprive the storms of the heat they need to grow. It is theorized that such a move might launch another ice age.
The coming hurricane season is expected to be a ripsnorter, according to forecaster William Gray and his Colorado State University forecasting team. They have been predicting hurricane activity for many years, with an increasingly high level of accuracy. "Overall, we anticipate the 2003 Atlantic-basin hurricane season to be very active," Gray said in a statement about his findings.
He expects the season to include 14 tropical storms, with eight of them developing into hurricanes. Of those monster storms, three are predicted to generate winds of 111 mph or more. At least one of the storms is likely to hit land, the expert said. Due to increasing coastal development, Gray believes populated coastal areas are very much at risk. Though not necessarily predicting devastation this year, he did say, "It is inevitable that we will see hurricane-spawned destruction in coming years on a scale many, many times greater than what we have seen in the past."
One other particularly interesting finding by Gray and his team is that the recent upswing in hurricane activity in the Atlantic isn't related to global warming, as many groups and individuals have suggested. "There is no reasonable scientific way that such an interpretation of this recent upward shift ... can be made," according to Gray. Though couched in the refined language of an erudite scientist, it sure sounds like Gray is saying that the "blame-it-on-global-warming" crowd is full of bull on this one.
The Internet Spawns Boom in Bad Rx Drugs
The country is being flooded with counterfeit and unapproved prescription drugs, according to congressional investigators. Florida, Texas and California are among the primary gateways. Florida has followed up a major grand-jury investigation with tough new legislation.
At a recent hearing on the problem before the House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations, Food and Drug Administration (FDA) officials were unable to estimate the volume of drug shipments. One member of the subcommittee, which has been investigating the situation for two years, estimated that 10 million Americans buy drugs from overseas Internet sites. Many sites claim to ship drugs from Canada, but investigators found the shipments actually are coming from places including Thailand, India, Russia, Barbados and other countries.
Investigators told the subcommittee that both the FDA and the U.S. Bureau of Customs and Border Protection are overwhelmed by the influx of prescription drugs purchased online and unable to stem it. A report on the hearing appeared in USA Today and was posted at Insight online. Experts say the U.S. prescription-drug market reached $192 billion last year, giving an idea of the profit involved for criminals who carve out only a tiny slice of it. Counterfeiters target expensive drugs such as an AIDS medicine that sells for around $200 per vial. Sometimes the fakes do not contain the active ingredient of the drug, or it is in greatly diluted form.
Slate of Events Commemorate Korean Armistice
A new commemorative postage stamp honoring the 50th anniversary of the armistice that ended the Korean War will be issued by the U.S. Postal Service. The stamp depicts a portion of the new Korean War Veterans Memorial and will be issued during Armistice Day ceremonies at that site on The Mall in Washington on July 27. The stamp features a photo of the memorial. Depicted in statuary is a patrol composed of U.S. Army soldiers, three Marines, an airman, a sailor and a South Korean soldier serving with the American unit. The group is making its way through snow in rough Korean terrain.
Other elements of the monument include a black granite wall etched with faces of military personnel and other mementos of the war, a grove of 40 Linden trees and a reflecting pool. An inscription at the pool reads: "Our nation honors her sons and daughters who answered the call to defend a country they never knew and a people they never met." More than 1.5 million Americans served in Korea; more than 34,000 died there and more than 100,000 were wounded.
- New fabric for diapers and ski wear
- Wicca Casts Spell on Teen-Age Girls
- Unseen hand of religion extends America's reach
- Teachers strike back at disruptive students
- America's Quiet Epidemic
- Can better sex come with a pill? The nineties' impotence cure
- The Truth About the Dietary Supplement Act
- Wolf Pack Bites Back
- Getting to the root of beautiful hair: shiny, silky hair begins with a healthy scalp - includes list of resources and a recipe for an herbal scalp tonic
- Portfolio forecasting tools: what you need to know
- Made from scratch: When Honda built a plant in Alabama it also built a workforce-using local workers who had no experience in making cars - Recruitment & Hiring
- Industry Experts Launch Money Management Resources to Help People Overcome Debt and Learn Proper Money Management Practices
- Building successful logistics partnerships
- Banking technology, technological learning and competition: comparative case studies in Thai banking
- John Seely Brown Inducted Into 2004 Industry Hall of Fame
- SmartDisk's New VST Flash Media Reader(TM) Reads SmartMedia(TM), CompactFlash(TM) From A Single Desktop Unit
Content provided in partnership with