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brianstorms weblog: April 2004 Archives
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April 29, 2004
With Diving Buddies Like These, Who Needs Sharks
Geez.
NEWPORT BEACH, California (AP) --
A recreational diver forgotten at sea by a boat crew drifted five hours and prayed for his life before a Boy Scout on an excursion aboard a century-old ship spotted him.
Dan Carlock, 45, was left by his diving group Sunday as he drifted for hours about seven miles offshore.
He noted the time of day on his small, waterproof writing slate and took photographs of himself to document that he'd made it to the surface.
. . .
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Posted by brian at 09:45 AM
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April 28, 2004
San Diego: America's Former City
If a 3000-foot-wide asteroid hit downtown San Diego, all hell would break loose. Quite literally.
Here in La Jolla the 8.4-Richter-magnitude quake wouldn't start for four seconds after impact. Hardly enough time to pack up and load the SUV, let alone look up and go, "What was that?"
Problem is, before you even had time to think of saying "What was that?", the fireball, 288.9 times larger than the sun's diameter in the sky, would have already arrived. And it would stick around for 33 seconds, causing everything to, well, pretty much burn.
But then, we've all dealt with fire, how bad could it be? La Jollans would only have some 64 seconds to contemplate that notion, because that's how long after the blast before we'd be greeted with the arrival of rock, soil, buildings, bits of Petco Park, Sports Arena roof, Lindbergh Field runway, trees, water, aircraft carriers, transit buses, cars, everything else made of atoms.
A hurricane-scale wind? Hardly. Wind is simply too tame a word to use to describe the phenomenon. Asteroid impacts don't create wind . A more formal word, something a bespectacled post-doc in a white labcoat would readily say during a phone interview on Science Friday , s"
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