The problem of a major solar
event is the same problem that we had with understanding tsunamis until several
years ago. No data existed in the modern
era that could be relied on and whatever else existed was scattered and
terribly local.
Of course, those rare individuals
who are students of nature and its power, had a pretty good understanding but
they would hardly be called upon when one needs to permit a nuclear site. My point is that the millions are oblivious even
if a newspaper picks up on a risk and talks about it. Thus we have the same thing happening with
the risk of a solar driven EMP pulse simply frying all our electrical systems.
The very good news is that such
an event will be known to be on the way at least fifteen hours before it
arrives. This means that all power
plants can be in position to go into a complete shut down mode. It also means that public warnings can be
aired d distributed completely in that time space allowing everyone to be both
ready for the general shutdown but also to unplug all their own hardware.
Such steps should successfully eliminate almost all losses
and damage.
My point is that unlike a surprise hostile EMP attack with a
nuclear bomb, a solar event will be observed in time to go to a full blown
warning mode. That the Carrington event
first sent meters off scale also tells us what events are really coming our
way.
Civil defense needs to dust off their protocols anyway
because a real assault will certainly deploy EMP producing nuclear blasts
anyway and likely no ground blasts. An
awake civil defense and fire department should allow the correct measures to be
implemented.
Death Star
by Robert M. Schoch,
Ph.D.
Despite popular misconceptions, the Sun is not
a stable, unchanging, eternal, ball of fire in the sky. Indeed, from an
astrophysical and geological perspective, the Sun is quite the opposite. Fueled
by nuclear fusion reactions, it is unstable, continually seething and churning,
in disequilibrium, discharging not only visible light, but also a large energy
array across the electromagnetic spectrum, and belting out charged particles as
well. While the Sun may have little hiccups from time to time, it can also
suffer from major bouts of coughing, spewing massive “solar storms” Earth’s
way. Such storms, thousands of times more massive than anything recorded in
modern times, have left their marks in prehistoric records. It is inevitable
that major solar storms will hit us again, and although there is no consensus
as to exactly when, the evidence taken as a whole suggests that we are in for
something major very soon – in fact, we may be overdue! While experts may
disagree on the details, it is clear that a major solar storm will have
catastrophic consequences for our modern technological society.
The
Carrington Event
On Thursday, 1 September 1859, the British
astronomer Richard C. Carrington was observing and sketching an unusually large
and dark group of sunspots at his personal observatory at Redhill, about 32
kilometers south of central London. Carrington, although technically an
“amateur” (his family was in the brewery business), was an expert on the Sun
and had devoted his time and resources to unraveling the mysteries of our star.
Suddenly, on that fateful day, at 11:18 a.m. local time, Carrington observed
intense white flashes of light coming from two locations within the sunspot
group he was drawing. He was so startled by this unusual phenomenon that he
wanted a witness to corroborate his observations. In his own words, he…
…hastily ran to call some one to witness the
exhibition . . .[but he could find no one nearby], and on returning within 60
seconds, was mortified to find that it was already much changed and enfeebled.
The flashes were now “vanishing as two rapidly
fading dots of white light” and by 11:23 they had disappeared. Carrington had
observed firsthand an incredibly intense, but short-lived, solar flare. As it
turns out, there was another witness to the event. Richard Hodgson was
observing the Sun at the same time from his house and observatory at Highgate
(about 8 kilometers north of central London ),
and he too saw the white flashes.
At Kew Observatory about 16 kilometers east of
central London
self-recording magnetographs, owned by the Royal Society, were in operation
monitoring Earth’s magnetic field. At the very time of Carrington’s observation
of the solar flare a relatively small but abrupt disturbance was detected in
the tracings of the magnetographs. The magnetic field seemed to return to
normal, but then about seventeen and a half hours later all hell broke loose
and the magnetometers went off the scale. We now understand that this is what
happens when a huge coronal mass ejection (CME) – a giant bubble of ionized gas
ejected by the Sun – hits Earth’s magnetosphere. Given how bright the flare
was, modern estimates suggest the surface temperature of the Sun at the point
of emission was close to 50 million degrees Celsius. An enormous amount of
energy was released, not only as visible light but also as intense X-rays and
gamma rays, that traveled at the speed of light and thus hit Earth eight and a
half minutes later. A CME was simultaneously discharged by the Sun, but the
charged particles took considerably longer than the electromagnetic radiation
to cross from the Sun to Earth
Protons ejected by the Sun were accelerated by
the solar flare and CME to incredibly high energies, and penetrated our
atmosphere creating what is known as a solar proton event (SPE). According to
one estimate, this reduced the stratospheric ozone layer by five percent, and
it took years to fully recover. Furthermore, energetic protons hitting the
nuclei of nitrogen and oxygen atoms created a shower of neutrons that rained
down onto the surface of Earth. In 1859 there was no technology to detect the
solar proton event or the shower of neutrons and their associated elevated
levels of radiation. Today, among other effects, we would likely see the
widespread failure of computers and other electronics.
The CME was seen around the world over the
next several days as incredible auroral displays in the night skies, and at
unusually low latitudes. More importantly, and tellingly, the telegraph systems
of the time were widely affected. The 200,000 kilometers of telegraph lines
then in use suffered major disruptions and failures, becoming unusable as
unwanted electric currents flowed through the wires. In some cases the
telegraph operators found that they could disconnect the batteries they
normally used and instead send messages via the induced current. In other cases
the induced currents sent “fantastical and unreadable messages”. There were
instances where sparks flew from telegraph receiving instruments, some
operators were nearly electrocuted, and several telegraph stations reportedly
burned down.
The 1859 geomagnetic storm (the general name
given to a major disturbance in Earth’s magnetic field/magnetosphere caused by
factors external to Earth, such as a solar outburst), which actually consisted
of two separate CMEs and associated phenomena occurring over the period from
approximately 28 August through 5 September 1859, is referred to as the
Carrington Event. It is not just an historical oddity, but of extreme
importance to both our understanding of the dynamics of solar outbursts and our
ability to predict the ramifications of future solar events. In 1859
civilization suffered little more than a bit of inconvenience and damage to the
telegraph system. Such would not be the case if a Carrington-level Event
occurred today!
Modern
Ramifications of a Carrington Level Event
It is difficult to imagine the socioeconomic
impact of a Carrington Level Event (or greater) in the twenty-first century. I
believe that the clock is counting down until the next such event, and the
longer the Sun retains its pent-up energy, the larger the next major solar
event could be. At the same time, we as a society, with our increased reliance
on ever more sophisticated and fragile electronics, are becoming ever more
vulnerable to even relatively small-scale solar events. These two trends are
placing us on a collision course with disaster.
To make matters worse, modern global systems
have become incredibly interconnected and interdependent. This results in
efficiency when everything is running smoothly, but comes at the price of
extreme vulnerability relative to what would have been minor disruptions in the
past. To give one example,
Barry Lynn of the New America Foundation has
been studying industrial supply shocks since 1999, when he noticed that global
computer chip production was concentrated in Taiwan . After a severe earthquake
in that country, the global computer industry nearly shut down, crashing the
stocks of large computer makers. This level of concentration of the production
of key components in a globalized economy is a new phenomenon. Lynn’s work
points to the highly dangerous side of globalization, the flip side of a
hyper-efficient global supply chain. When one link in that chain is broken,
there is no fallback.
Applying this to a solar outburst, such as a
Carrington Level Event or greater, imagine if during the catastrophe the only
factory producing a particular critical part, vaccine, or medicine was put
offline.
In 2009 the staid British journal New Scientist published an
article with the provocative title “Space storm alert: 90 seconds from
catastrophe”, which opens with the following lines:
It is midnight on 22
September 2012 and the skies above Manhattan
are filled with a flickering curtain of colourful light. Few New Yorkers have
seen the aurora this far south but their fascination is short-lived. Within a
few seconds, electric bulbs dim and flicker, then become unusually bright for a
fleeting moment. Then all the lights in the state go out. Within 90 seconds,
the entire eastern half of the US
is without power.
A year later and
millions of Americans are dead and the nation’s infrastructure lies in tatters.
The World Bank declares America
a developing nation. Europe, Scandinavia, China and Japan are also struggling
to recover from the same fateful event – a violent storm, 150 million
kilometres away on the surface of the sun.
It sounds ridiculous. Surely the sun couldn’t
create so profound a disaster on Earth. Yet an extraordinary report funded by
NASA and issued by the US National Academy of Sciences (NAS)…claims it
could do just that.
In fact, this scenario is not so ridiculous at
all, as the New Scientist article
goes on to relate. Indeed, if things do not change, it may well be inevitable.
Our modern technological society is, without
exaggeration, totally dependent on a constant supply of electricity. An
immediate worry concerning a major solar outburst is the vulnerability of
modern electricity grid systems – the wires that crisscross nations, and indeed
the entire world. The high-voltage systems will essentially act as huge
antennae picking up and channeling direct current (DC) as a result of a solar
outburst. The power transmission lines are designed to carry alternating (AC)
currents, and although the geomagnetically induced current may be relatively
weak compared to the currents that normally flow through the transmission
lines, since the geomagnetic current is a DC current it can saturate the
transformers and system. Among other effects, the all-important transformers
along grid lines could heat up and melt, causing massive blackouts. This
famously happened in Quebec Province (Canada ) when on 13 March 1989 a
solar storm disrupted Hydro-Quebec transmission lines and in less than two
minutes a blackout occurred affecting six million people for nine to twelve
hours. In this particular case a billion-ton cloud of gas and plasma was
released from the Sun with the energy of thousands of nuclear bombs exploding
simultaneously and headed toward Earth at a speed of approximately 1.6 million
kilometers an hour.
March 6, 2012 X5.4 Solar Flare.
Besides the Quebec
blackout, the solar flare accompanying the March 1989 solar storm (which was
nowhere near the size of the Carrington Event) caused short-wave radio signals
to be disrupted, including the jamming of Radio Free Europe that was being
broadcast into Russia
– initially the Kremlin was suspected as the culprit. Such geomagnetic storms
can affect the entire globe, especially the stronger storms (at the level of
the Carrington Event and greater), but the immediate risk is most severe at
higher latitudes due to the fact that the incoming electric currents are
funneled or sucked into Earth’s poles. Thus northern latitude Quebec
was hard hit by the March 1989 solar storm, and during the solar storms that
occurred around Halloween in 2003 there were blackouts in the city of Malmö , Sweden ,
and transformers failed in South
Africa . But, returning to the March 1989
storm, not only Quebec
was affected. Spectacular aurora were seen as far south as Florida
and Cuba ,
indicative of the strength of the storm. In the United States no blackouts
occurred, but this was perhaps simply a matter of good fortune. Over 200 power
grid problems were reported across the U.S. within minutes of the solar
storm hitting. And there were still more direct consequences, as reported by
astronomer Sten Odenwald:
In space, some satellites actually tumbled out
of control for several hours. NASA’s TDRS-1 communication satellite recorded
over 250 anomalies as high-energy particles invaded the satellite’s sensitive
electronics. Even the Space Shuttle Discovery was having its own mysterious
problems. A sensor on one of the tanks supplying hydrogen to a fuel cell was
showing unusually high pressure readings on March 13. The problem went away
just as mysteriously after the solar storm subsided.
A May 1921 geomagnetic storm, caused by a
solar outburst, was intermediate in size between the 1859 Carrington Event and
the March 1989 solar storm that affected Quebec .
In 1921 electrical grid systems and associated technology were neither as
extensive nor as susceptible to geomagnetically induced currents as our systems
are today. According to recent studies, a 1921 level solar storm could cause
300 to 350 or more large extra high voltage (EHV) transformers to fail or be
permanently damaged in the United States, resulting in major electrical grid
collapses with resulting blackouts for 130 million people, and the blackouts
could last for years. Likewise, transformers would fail around the world. Large
transformers, once damaged by overheating, burning, and melting, cannot be
repaired but must be replaced. There are few crews trained to replace the
transformers, and few spares of these large and expensive transformers on hand.
Once the supply of spare transformers has been exhausted, new transformers will
have to be manufactured. Even in normal times it can take a year or more to
have a large transformer built and delivered. How will it even be possible to
build transformers in areas without electricity to power manufacturing
facilities?
The scenario described in the last paragraph
is based on the May 1921 geomagnetic storm. A Carrington Level Event would be
much worse. Plus, in either case, not only the United States would be hit, but
nations around the world. Globally electrical grids would be damaged, with
attendant blackouts. And it would be the most developed, technologically
sophisticated, modern, industrialized countries that would be most affected.
Less developed countries and regions, less dependent on modern infrastructure,
would experience fewer disruptions, but given the interconnectedness of the
global economy, surely they would ultimately feel the impacts too. Loss of
electric power for any length of time, say more than a day or two, is not a
minor nuisance in the developed world. Our entire modern societies run on, and
are dependent on, a ready and reliable supply of electricity. Without
electricity, such necessities as water and sewage treatment would be affected,
and in short order water would stop flowing in our public water systems. Those
living in high-rise apartment buildings, where water has to be pumped to reach
their floors, would lose water straightaway. All electrical appliances would
stop working, from computers, lights (imagine the dark nights!), refrigerators,
microwaves, televisions, and just about everything else associated with our
electronically based society. Battery-powered devices would last only as long
as the batteries hold, and then what?
Office buildings, apartment complexes,
factories, government buildings, certain small communities, and so forth have
backup generators in place, but such generators will last only as long as there
is fuel to power them. Depending on what measures may be in place, within days
or weeks the fuel will run out. Even if more fuel is theoretically available,
without electricity there may be no way to deliver it. Pumps at service (gas)
stations will not work without electricity; transportation by petroleum-powered
vehicles will come to a halt. Furthermore, without electricity traffic lights
(so essential to keeping order in large modern cities) will stop functioning.
Much public transportation in some cities, such as trolleys, subways and
electric bus lines is directly dependent on electricity that will no longer be
available. Underground tracks, such as for subways, may become flooded from
penetrating rain and groundwater without electric pumps to keep them dry.
Buildings will lack air-conditioning, which is
directly dependent on electricity. In hot areas, people will die from heat stroke,
especially after the drinkable water runs out. In cold regions buildings and
people may freeze. Some heating systems use electricity directly. Others, which
use oil or natural gas as the fuel, still depend on electricity to pump the
fuel, to circulate water or air through the building, to ignite the fuel in the
furnace, and to regulate the temperature through electric thermostats. No
electricity, no heat!
Without refrigeration, many foodstuffs will
quickly go bad. Even as peoples’ food spoils, fresh supplies will be
unavailable. With most or all transportation shut down, any food in
supermarkets, or food stockpiled elsewhere, will quickly run out and not be
replenished. The same holds true for other items, from toilet paper to
prescription drugs, which many people simply take for granted. Likewise medical
supplies that need to be kept under controlled temperature conditions may be
ruined, and as supplies are exhausted no more will be available. Indeed, any
hospital, once the fuel supply for its emergency backup generators is
exhausted, will be in very bad shape.
Ultimately, due to the devastation caused by a
Carrington Level Event (or greater) hundreds of millions of lives could be
lost.
Ironically, many of the very things that make
our modern society so “efficient”, such as lack of redundancy (why keep
old-fashioned bulky paper copies of records when they can be stored
electronically?), not wasting space warehousing materials and supplies locally,
and the concept of just-in-time delivery that is so dependent on steady and
reliable transportation networks, make us especially vulnerable and even
helpless in the face of massive grid failures and blackouts.
Beyond disruption of electricity grid systems,
electronic communication and satellite systems could be significantly
disrupted. With a major solar outburst, satellites could literally leave their
designated orbits as the density of the atmosphere they travel through changes,
causing them to change speed. High-frequency (HF) radio communications, such as
those routinely used by aircraft, and HF navigation signals from Global
Positioning System (GPS) satellites, will be scrambled and disrupted. A major
breakdown in communication systems could lead to literal anarchy. Even a
government is dependent on reliable communications to govern and control the
distribution of services and goods, and maintain law and order.
A very specific and serious worry involves the
roughly 440 nuclear power plants worldwide. As was demonstrated by the March
2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant disaster, when electricity is lost
and cooling pumps can no longer keep the reactor cool, the reactor can
overheat, potentially meltdown (or explode), and radioactive materials will be
released to the environment. In the face of a major solar outburst, we could
have hundreds of Chernobyl
type situations around the planet simultaneously, and with massive blackouts to
boot, no foreseeable way to even attempt to realistically deal with the
situation. It is difficult enough to attempt to address a Chernobyl
or Fukushima
level nuclear disaster in isolation!
One of the major results of a Carrington Level
Event could be the collapse of electronic based financial and monetary systems.
In the twenty-first century more and more of our financial transactions are
carried out in terms of electronic money; that is in terms of simply numbers in
computers. There is for the vast majority of “money” in modern industrialized
countries actually nothing beyond the electronic accounting system. The money
has no physical backing – certainly not gold or other valuables, and not even
paper bills or token coins. Quantitative finance expert Espen Haug points out
that in 1991 the United States
Federal Reserve determined that 69% of all United States dollars were in
purely electronic form. Over two decades later this number has surely
increased; Haug estimates that 90% of the U.S. money supply currently is
purely electronic, and a similar situation occurs for many other countries.
In the case of a major solar outburst, one that
would overload power grids, burning out transformers, causing widespread
blackouts, disrupting communication systems, and damaging and destroying
computers and all sorts of electronic systems, the basis for the global
monetary system, as well as national monetary systems, could be destroyed. Not
only would transactions be “temporarily” impossible (where temporarily could
encompass not just days or weeks, but months or years), but also in many cases
electronic financial records could be severely compromised or completely
destroyed, such that it would be impossible to reconstruct the system as it was
prior to the impact. The only saving grace might be if financial institutions
and companies had their records securely backed up in safe havens well protected
from the solar onslaught. Possibly the best bet would be storage in
self-contained (certainly not connected to an external power grid) secure caves
and tunnels deep inside mountains with tens of meters of solid rock to provide
shielding from radiation.
Frying
the Earth at the End of the Last Ice Age
Historically the Carrington Event is the
largest such event in the last 450 years (based on nitrate concentrations in
ice cores going back to 1561). However, much larger solar outbursts have
occurred in the past. A record of solar activity has been reconstructed using
fluctuations of isotopes 14C and 10Be recorded dendrochronologically (in tree
rings) and in polar ice cores respectively. This has been done with
considerable accuracy back to circa 9500 BCE (essentially the end of the last
ice age), and the results are rather startling – our Sun has been more active
over the last few decades (since about the middle of the twentieth century)
than it has been for thousands of years. Depending on how the data is interpreted
(the translation of the isotope data to solar activity is not straight-forward,
but requires various forms of analyses), the overall level of solar activity is
the highest it has been since about 9500 to 9000 BCE, the end of the last ice
age!
Earth-directed Coronal Mass Ejection (CME), recorded January 19, 2012 by the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (
Paul LaViolette has marshaled evidence that a
major solar flare accompanied by a super solar proton event (or events) at the
end of the last ice age fried the Earth (to use the description of LaViolette’s
hypothesis put forth in the popular Space
Daily). LaViolette bases his conclusions on meticulous analyses of
radiocarbon concentrations in sediment cores from the Cariaco Basin (off the
coast of Venezuela) correlated with acidity spikes, high NO–3 concentrations,
and rises in 10Be deposition rates in the Greenland ice record, all of which he
argues are indicators of a sudden cosmic ray influx, in turn correlating with
solar activity as expressed specifically through solar flares and SPEs.
Additionally, there would also have been accompanying coronal mass ejections
(CMEs) on an enormous scale. LaViolette dates the SPE event, which is the major
focus of his 2011 paper, to “12,837 +/- 10 cal [calendar] years BP” and equates
it with major faunal extinctions in North America
at this time. LaViolette also notes that there may have been other SPE events
at the end of the last ice age, stating,
This suggests that an overly active Sun may
have played a significant role also in causing abrupt climatic change at the
end of the ice age.
In his paper LaViolette discusses some of the
effects of a massive SPE and attendant solar activity for the Earth. The ozone
layer, our protection from deadly UV rays, would have been greatly depleted
with major ozone holes forming in some areas, that is if the ozone layer was
not altogether destroyed completely! Increased doses of damaging, and
potentially lethal, UV radiation could have posed a major hazard for organisms
on Earth, especially in high and middle latitudes. Besides the increased UV
radiation, high-energy cosmic rays that are part of a major SPE would penetrate
the atmosphere and raise radiation levels on the ground.
According to LaViolette’s calculations,
unprotected organisms at sea level during the major SPE event he studied could
have accumulated radiation doses of three to six Sieverts (a unit of radiation
exposure) over a period of two or three days. Lethal radiation doses for humans
are in the range of about 3.5 Sieverts, and for many large mammals in the 3 to 8
Sievert range. The best mode of protection at the time, both from the UV
radiation and the cosmic ray radiation, may have been to seek safety in caves
and other underground shelters. Interestingly, Austrian archaeologist and
speleologist Dr. Heinrich Kusch and his wife Ingrid Kusch have documented
hundreds upon hundreds of tunnel systems under Neolitihic settlements found
throughout Europe and Turkey ,
some dating back to around 12,000 years ago.
LaViolette also determined that an enormous
SPE would significantly disturb the geomagnetic field of Earth and induce a
partial (or possibly complete, at least for a short period of time?) collapse
of the magnetosphere. Earth is surrounded by a dust cloud, composed of
interplanetary debris plus particles that the solar wind blows off of the
surface of the Moon. These particles are trapped in the magnetosphere, held and
essentially protected there. But with a partial or complete collapse of the
magnetosphere, cosmic rays, SPEs, and CMEs could heat the particles up, causing
them to melt, and subsequently they would re-solidify, forming spherules.
Furthermore, dust particles and spherules could be jettisoned into the
atmosphere, and eventually fall to the surface of Earth – as has been found at
numerous sites dating back to the end of the last ice age.
I believe that LaViolette puts together a very
powerful and compelling argument that our Sun was much more active, by orders
of magnitude, at the end of the last ice age. The core of LaViolette’s
meticulous work is that our Sun is not stable, but goes through periods of
major instability and increased activity (whatever the cause of such
instability and increased activity may be), and the last major (there have been
ups and downs since then) occurrence of such increased solar activity was at
the end of the last ice age – that is, unless we are willing to acknowledge that
the Sun is ramping up right now and again going into a period of instability
and increased activity after a lull of thousands of years.
Will it happen again, and soon?
A truism of geology is
that if something has happened in the past, it can happen again in the future –
and all the indications are that a major solar outburst will occur sooner
rather than later! Writing in the prestigious journal Nature, S. K.
Solanki and colleagues state,
According
to our reconstruction, the level of solar activity during the past 70 years is
exceptional, and the previous period of equally high activity occurred more
than 8000 years ago.
James A.
Marusek, a physicist and engineer who until his retirement worked for the U.S.
Department of the Navy, argues that the Sun is currently undergoing a state
change. That is, the inherently unstable Sun is readjusting and
re-equilibrating, as it must do periodically through geological time. We may
already have had a precursor of what is to come in the very near future, namely
the solar storms of 1859. During the summer of 2011, there were reports that
the Sun is showing signs of going into a period of low activity when just the
opposite had been expected. It is not clear if this is really the case, but
even if it is, it does not preclude the possibility there could be some very
unusual activity of the Sun on the other extreme – that is during a period of
relative dormancy or hibernation there could be an incredible solar outburst.
At the end of the ice age some 12,000 years ago there were wild fluctuations in
sunspot activity, wide swings between highs and lows, and it seems that during
periods of low sunspot activity the energy builds up and erupts as massive
solar outbursts rather than being given off as more numerous and smaller flares
and CMEs. The 1859 Carrington Event occurred during an overall “quiet” period.
As plasma physicist Paul Kintner (Cornell
University ) has stated,
The
Carrington event happened during a mediocre, ho-hum solar cycle… It came out of
nowhere, so we just don’t know when something like that is going to happen
again.
Being a
geologist, I like the analogy of a major active tectonic/earthquake zone where
stress is building up – the stress and energy can be relieved either by many
small earthquakes in succession over time, or the stress and energy can build
up and continue to build up until it is finally released as one or a few major
earthquakes (and the accompanying foreshocks and aftershocks). A short-term
lull in sunspot activity says to me that energy is building up in the Sun and
it will be released, probably sooner rather than later, in one or a few massive
outbursts. My conclusion is that we better be prepared!
It seems
that some governments are taking the threat of a major solar outburst
seriously. During the summer of 2011 there were reports that the British
government…
…has
been warned that a massive surge of energy from the sun could hit the Earth in
the next 18 months. In a worst-case scenario, it could blow out the national
grid and leave parts of the country without electricity for months.
Therefore,
according to the same article, the British government is making plans to deal
with such a scenario, including invoking emergency powers to shut down the
electricity grid (purposefully causing massive, though hopefully temporary,
blackouts) in an attempt to protect the infrastructure from the worst effects.
On the other hand, it was reported that in Australia (which is at lower
latitudes than Britain, and arguably therefore less vulnerable to some types of
solar outbursts) “electricity experts are not convinced the solar flare will
have anywhere near the catastrophic effects predicted in Britain and think any
electromagnetic surge will go largely unnoticed”. One wonders, however, if the
attitude expressed by the Australian officials – and the same holds true for
government leaders and spokespeople elsewhere around the world – is actually a
cover so as to avoid concern and potential panic among an ignorant public, even
as those in the know secretly make plans to protect themselves and their
institutions.
Robert M. Schoch
received a Ph.D. in Geology and Geophysics from Yale University, and since 1984
has been a full-time faculty member at the College of General Studies of Boston
University. His books include the trilogy with R. A. McNally: Voices of
the Rocks, Voyages of the Pyramid Builders, and Pyramid Quest. His
most recent book is The Parapsychology Revolution: A Concise Anthology of
Paranormal and Psychical Research (Compilation and Commentary by Robert M.
Schoch and Logan
Yonavjak, Tarcher/Penguin, 2008). Dr. Schoch’s personal website is located at:
www.robertschoch.com.
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