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Survival and Preparations Long and short term survival and 'prepping'. |
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Physicists Say This Is the Best Place to Hide Indoors From a Nuclear Shockwave
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While interesting, I'm not sure how much practical/actionable value this info may have. The first assumption is you're in the goldilocks region of close enough to get the damaging wind effects of a shockwave, but far enough away where the heat/shockwave doesn't obliterate your entire house. Then you have to be aware that the shockwave is coming before it arrives, which would be noticing the intense bright light and recognizing it as a nuclear explosion. And being able to notice that without going blind, which if one was blind and in pain, good luck rapidly finding a safe place to hunker down for the imminent shockwave. I suppose this info might be useful if a nuclear attack is expected/possible so one could consider it for a sleeping location.
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Where I live, a relatively high air blast could be effective, else the canyon walls of a pretty narrow canyon plus copious old growth trees will likely absorb much of the wind/heat. A tree falling on the house could do the trick so that's a factor.
I'm developing a bunker behind the garage underneath my workshop that should be helpful. The floor should be just above the historic high water level of the creek which is about 20' away. Last edited by user120312; 01-22-2023 at 5:16 PM.. |
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But, that brings up the question often posted on this site... ![]() It would seem to be, in theory at least, a relevant discussion... Top Russian official warns of ‘global tragedy’ if allies send Ukraine new weapons Quote:
Which is why, I suppose, it was posted this morning... 2023 'Doomsday Clock' announcement: What to know and expect... Quote:
It seems to come under the heading of... ![]() |
#9
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It's legitimate, put together by a Science professor and allows you to select various yields, air burst vs surface detonation, etc. The site's been up for awhile, but it was bandied about a bit when Putin started 'threatening' nuclear war... Nuclear Bomb Blast Map Shows What Would Happen if One Detonated Near You There are several YouTube videos... The bottom line is... There's no way to account for all the variables and, certainly, a primary target such as Los Angeles isn't going to get just one sent its way; potentially making the program more relevant to a terrorist attack. But, it's interesting. |
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I know this thread is about surviving the initial blast/shockwave but I think anyone living near one of the target cities needs to consider the aftermath as well. Radiation poisoning from the fallout carries a death sentence of two days or two weeks and is a horrible way to die.
One comment that seems to always follow any discussion on nuclear war is that the living will envy the dead.
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#12
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The problem is that it's mostly theoretically; i.e., extrapolation from what happened after Hiroshima and Nagasaki coupled with guesswork. Some of it can also be extrapolated from nuclear tests and what happened at places such as Chernobyl and Fukushima. But, at the scale of WW "last" (use of nuclear weapons) and given the near-infinite variables, the simple fact is that nobody knows what the situation will be. If you're interested, in 1986... Casualties Due to the Blast, Heat, and Radioactive Fallout from Various Hypothetical Nuclear Attacks on the United States Quote:
Let's just say that an all-out, nuclear exchange isn't likely to leave much in terms of what can be exploited or those who could/would exploit it. Of course, there's always... Or, alternatively... So... There's no reason to abandon all hope just yet. ![]() |
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If I didn't live where I do I might have a more positive attitude but I don't worry about it. The nuclear weapons today are so much more powerful than the ones dropped on Japan that if even one gets through our defenses and strikes the LA area it will be over in a flash.
Like I said, I don't worry about it and never really think about it unless it comes up in conversation.
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By the way, according to MIT... The Devastating Effects of Nuclear Weapons
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If you can't run you might be able to find a place in the city to hide if you planned it all out and you had advanced warning. If you were up to waiting for the radiation to subside you might survive the initial blast. It would really suck though. We used to have bomb shelters all throughout the city. You may occasionally find a sign in an older building or still see air raid sirens in certain parts of the city.
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#19
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From November 2022... Where Are All the Nuclear Bunkers? Quote:
I took a look at a town I'm fairly familiar with here in California using the NukeMap link I provided in Post #9. I set off a "Fat Boy" sized, single weapon and they automatically placed the detonation location 2.5 blocks from what used to be the major, public fallout shelter downtown. Let's just say that what used to be the public fallout shelter (it hasn't been considered that for decades and even the warning siren was removed LONG ago) was located just outside the fireball radius and that's a relatively small yield bomb by today's standards. Another public shelter in that immediate area was a 15 - 20 minute drive from that location; assuming no traffic or congestion. If you could get there and were allowed inside, even back in the 1970's, which was the last time I 'toured' that location, it was a joke. There were absolutely no supplies and no air filtration; let alone 'facilities,' be they medical, sanitary, or other. The next, closest 'shelter' location was an 'hour' away and it was never, officially, designated as such. It was simply 'studied' for its potential. It was determined that those who sheltered there might survive 'the blast' in that location, but too many resources would have to be dedicated to making it 'safe' from fallout and given the relative location, not to mention being insufficient for a significant portion of the 'local' population, it was abandoned as impractical. Let's just say that the 'town' is, today, a city and 'more closely' located to other 'towns' which have also become cities. Let's further stipulate that the potential targets have multiplied, making the use of a single vs. multiple warheads... uh... unlikely. Back in the 1980's, I put together a project 'mapping' nuclear targets in California using publicly available information. (Never mind the 'classified' locations given that I was only aware of some of them and wasn't necessarily at liberty to discuss those.) Let's just say that many who were given access were 'surprised' in that a good part of the State was marked with primary, secondary, and tertiary targets; severely 'disrupting' what had been, to that point, considered 'appropriate' planning. Thus, your... "If you can't run you might be able to find a place in the city to hide if you planned it all out and you had advanced warning." ... becomes relative to the "might" and you would need to add the word sufficient to "advanced warning." That's assuming you actually survived the initial blast; something Civil Defense shelters were never intended for. Therefore, GeeBee49's comment... Quote:
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Once again... As has often been asked... How many days did it take FEMA to get water to the Superdome? Such speaks to the very heart of why Americans used to never really rely on Government if they were 'serious' about surviving a nuclear exchange (or just about any other 'disaster' for that matter) and whether 'survivalist/prepper' mentalities were appropriate. It was a discussion which came up in relation to an episode of The Twilight Zone ("The Shelter")... |
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I've extensively studied physicist/bioscientist Bruce Banner's work on gramma radiation.
His technical papers were filled with lots of scientific jargon like "ME-SMMASH" but I think the gist of what he was saying was very counterintuitive... So I will run towards that "grammar radiation" and try and soak up as much as possible. Sure you might get a little cranky, rip your clothes, wake up later and not know anything about what you did... but most of us here are doing that stuff anyway. ![]() Wait is it grammar radiation or Grandma radiation? Because I know one is for Big Pimpin, and the other one is still annoying but less harmful. |
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This is what they are talking about when they reference a nuclear shockwave...
This was a test of the atomic cannon in 1953. Detonating at 524' above ground with a 15 kiloton yield, it was shot from 7 miles away. As a basis of comparison, the Hiroshima bomb had an approximate 16 kiloton yield and the Nagasaki bomb had an approximate 21 kiloton yield. Put out on 5 October 2022 by The Washington Post... Here are the nuclear weapons Russia has in its arsenal Quote:
Remember, the study done in the OP assumed a 750 kiloton weapon. In February of 2015... What would happen if an 800-kiloton nuclear warhead detonated above midtown Manhattan?... Quote:
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#22
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So... Who do we believe? From the OP (bold emphasis mine)...
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Could it be that we're simply back to Bert the Turtle (see the OP) and the fact that we're, in essence, dealing with theoretical abstraction? Or... Is it really not so much theoretical abstraction... ... but more a function of sufficient warning, distance, size of explosion, and the fact that it's more about the blast wave than the shock wave? Or... Is that splitting things a little too fine in that the blast wave is, in essence, the same thing as the shock wave? High-speed Imaging of Shock Waves, Explosions and Gunshots (bold emphasis mine)... Quote:
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All of which was more pithily stated in the first reply to this thread... Quote:
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#23
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Remember this?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VBV8nnp98vc That was about 2.75 kilotons of ammonium nitrate at ground level. |
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In other words, the Beirut explosion was, in the grand scheme of things, inconsequential when compared to a nuclear weapon. As a basis of comparison, you might try... How powerful was the Beirut blast? A more scientific discussion of that blast can be found... Yield estimation of the 2020 Beirut explosion using open access waveform and remote sensing data... to arrive at approximately the same conclusion... Quote:
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#27
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Good to know useful information.
![]() So if you survive the initial blast by hiding in the corner, you’ll only have to deal with the severe, painful and slow death from radiation poisoning all over your body and inside the lungs, mouth and sinus cavity. I’d rather die immediately in the blast if I’m that close to ground zero.
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![]() Pay attention, I?m educating you and I?m using small words. -Mark Levin Enraging liberals is simply one of the more enjoyable side effects of my wisdom. -Rush R.I.P. -ΙΧΘΥΣ <>< |
#28
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Besides the remarkable, if believable, tales of the Jesuit eight, there were also first hand accounts of how location and position enabled survival of both the blast and subsequent radiation. One sample from a Jesuit priest who was there when Japan was bombed....
https://youtu.be/7OSigsRhSRA?t=355 I located to high ground mainly to avoid tsunamis at anything but a cataclysmic level but forested canyon living also could provide some protection from atomic events as the story from the Jesuit underscores, in his case with their mission, being four miles from epicenter, having a hill between them and the city area where the blast took place. |
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But, what 'prepping' does is 1.) provide a sense (realistic or not) that you have some 'control' over your destiny and (2.) create a potentially increased set of odds that you will survive. While one cannot count on or even exercise much, if any, actual control, just the 'sense of control' helps many psychologically. Put another way, if you don't see a point, then Life itself is pointless in that we are all survivors/survivalists from the moment of conception. While there are limits to our ability to 'control' things and what or how much we can prepare for, as most survival instructors point out, actual survival is roughly 90% psychological and 10% physical. That's the point of 'prepping.' While there are limits to what you can do in regard to the 10%, there's virtually no limit as to how you deal with the 90% beyond the amount of time/effort you put into it. The more you know or the better 'prepared' you are, the more you can 'control' or the better your odds of 'controlling' the physical circumstances. |
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