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by jwm20
2653 days ago
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You may be interested in a recent episode of the 99 Percent Invisible podcast (https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/atomic-tattoos/). The title of the podcast comes from a Cold War program carried out in 1952 in which students could opt to receive a small tattoo of their blood type, with the goal of creating a "walking blood bank" in the event of a disaster requiring mass transfusions. Related to your question, the episode also explores the history of "duck and cover." It turns out it's there is some credibility to the technique. In September 1945, the US sent a team called the Atomic Bomb Casualty Commission to Japan to research and interview survivors of nuclear blasts. They located survivors just a few blocks from the explosion epicenter, who had been sheltered by concrete basements. They also heard stories of people who were killed just by shattering windows and falling debris. With just some ability to shelter, survivability might be higher than you suspect. |
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"Its explosion created panic among local residents, and about 1,500 people were injured seriously enough to seek medical treatment. All of the injuries were due to indirect effects rather than the meteor itself, mainly from broken glass from windows that were blown in when the shock wave arrived, minutes after the superbolide's flash."
Many of the injured went to a window to see the spectacle in the sky, not realizing that the shock wave was about to shatter the window in their face.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chelyabinsk_meteor