Forum Home

Master Index of Archived Threads


Manslaughter????

Nymr83
May 27 2011 11:08 AM

[url]http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/05/27/italian-scientist-charged-manslaughter-failing-predict-earthquake/

Italy is fucking insane. They charged a seismologist with Manslaughter for not predicting a fatal earthquake!!

Can I sue the weatherman next time he fails to predict rain and I leave stuff outside that gets ruined?

metirish
May 27 2011 11:16 AM
Re: Manslaughter????

Enzo Boschi, the president of Italy's National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV), will face trial along with six other scientists and technicians, after failing to predict the future and the impending disaster.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/05/ ... z1NZeYBVyz


stupid.

Edgy DC
May 27 2011 12:19 PM
Re: Manslaughter????

Earthquakes are, of course, nearly impossible to predict, seismologists say. In fact, according to the website for the USGS, no major quake has ever been predicted successfully.


"Not true!" says Atlantic Monthly:

Jian Lin was 14 years old in 1973, when the Chinese government under Mao Zedong recruited him for a student science team called “the earthquake watchers.” After a series of earthquakes that had killed thousands in northern China, the country’s seismologists thought that if they augmented their own research by having observers keep an eye out for anomalies like snakes bolting early from their winter dens and erratic well-water levels, they might be able to do what no scientific body had managed before: issue an earthquake warning that would save thousands of lives.

In the winter of 1974, the earthquake watchers were picking up some suspicious signals near the city of Haicheng. Panicked chickens were squalling and trying to escape their pens; water levels were falling in wells. Seismologists had also begun noticing a telltale pattern of small quakes. “They were like popcorn kernels,” Lin tells me, “popping up all over the general area.” Then, suddenly, the popping stopped, just as it had before a catastrophic earthquake in 1966 that killed more than 8,000. “Like ‘the calm before the storm,’” Lin says. “We have that exact same phrase in Chinese.” On the morning of February 4, 1975, the seismology bureau issued a warning: Haicheng should expect a big earthquake, and people should move outdoors.

At 7:36 p.m., a magnitude 7.0 quake struck. The city was nearly leveled, but only about 2,000 people were killed. Without the warning, easily 150,000 would have died.
“And so you finally had an earthquake forecast that did indeed save lives,” Lin recalls. “People were excited. Or, you could say, uplifted. Uplifted is a great word for it.” But uplift turned to heartbreak the very next year, when a 7.5 quake shattered the city of Tangshan without so much as a magnitude 4 to introduce it. When the quake hit the city of 1.6 million at 3:42 a.m., it killed nearly 250,000 people, most of whom were asleep. “If there was any moment in my life when I was scared of earthquakes, that was it,” Lin says. “You think, what if it happened to you? And it could. I decided that if I could do anything—anything to save lives lost to earthquakes, it would be worth the effort.”

metsmarathon
May 27 2011 12:51 PM
Re: Manslaughter????

earthquakes are predictable, except when they're not. got it. wonder how many false alarms might've been issued as well.

Frayed Knot
May 27 2011 01:43 PM
Re: Manslaughter????

I'd reckon that seismologists have had a much better track record throughout the last eight decades or so than have Italian governments.

Edgy DC
May 27 2011 05:31 PM
Re: Manslaughter????

"See, I told you these people were kooky!"

--- Amanda Knox