Crunchy Con

Duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuck!

Friday May 16, 2008

Categories: Decline and fall

This is one you'll really want to read: Gregg Easterbrook's Atlantic Monthly cover story on the rather disconcerting odds that a Rilly Big Space Rock might fall on our heads. Excerpt:

In 1980, only 86 near-Earth asteroids and comets were known to exist. By 1990, the figure had risen to 170; by 2000, it was 921; as of this writing, it is 5,388. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory, part of NASA, keeps a running tally at www.neo.jpl.nasa.gov/stats. Ten years ago, 244 near-Earth space rocks one kilometer across or more—the size that would cause global calamity—were known to exist; now 741 are. Of the recently discovered nearby space objects, NASA has classified 186 as “impact risks” (details about these rocks are at www.neo.jpl.nasa.gov/risk). And because most space-rock searches to date have been low-budget affairs, conducted with equipment designed to look deep into the heavens, not at nearby space, the actual number of impact risks is undoubtedly much higher. Extrapolating from recent discoveries, NASA estimates that there are perhaps 20,000 potentially hazardous asteroids and comets in the general vicinity of Earth.

More:

A more recent event gives further cause for concern. As buffs of the television show The X Files will recall, just a century ago, in 1908, a huge explosion occurred above Tunguska, Siberia. The cause was not a malfunctioning alien star-cruiser but a small asteroid or comet that detonated as it approached the ground. The blast had hundreds of times the force of the Hiroshima bomb and devastated an area of several hundred square miles. Had the explosion occurred above London or Paris, the city would no longer exist. Mark Boslough, a researcher at the Sandia National Laboratory, in New Mexico, recently concluded that the Tunguska object was surprisingly small, perhaps only 30 meters across. Right now, astronomers are nervously tracking 99942 Apophis, an asteroid with a slight chance of striking Earth in April 2036. Apophis is also small by asteroid standards, perhaps 300 meters across, but it could hit with about 60,000 times the force of the Hiroshima bomb—enough to destroy an area the size of France. In other words, small asteroids may be more dangerous than we used to think—and may do considerable damage even if they don’t reach Earth’s surface.

Henny Penny, on behalf of the reading public, I formally apologize.

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Comments
rombald
May 17, 2008 4:55 AM

Another Black Swan would be a supervolcano eruption - it would wipe out civilisation, although probably not humanity.

Rawlins Reality Realty
May 17, 2008 11:37 AM

People are showing their age with Al Gore jokes. Kids who were not yet in school are now in college since the day when he was a player on the political stage. The real joke here should be (and how am I the first to see it?) that yes, there are so many apocalyptic scenarios regarding this Earth's dangerous trajectories, but: If we survive George W. Bush, all things are possible. This is of course foresight wisdom predicated upon the notion (as yet unproved) that surviving these last 8 years will have in fact been provable long term. Stay tuned. (The War of the World’s with your host, Orson Welles).

Steve
May 17, 2008 12:05 PM

Anyone remember which science fiction writer wrote a short story in which astronauts landed on the other planets only to find that they were incomplete and botched attempts to make and Earth?

Steve

Scott Lahti
May 17, 2008 12:20 PM

The Shorter War of the Worlds, or, Mercury Had Nothing on *This* Theater:

We know now that in the early years of the twentieth century, this world was being watched closely by intelligences greater than man's, yet as mortal as his own...

We take you now to Grover's Mill, New Jersey:

Ladies and gentlemen, this is Carl Phillips - Professor Pierson and I made the eleven miles from Princeton in ten minutes...what I can see of the object itself doesn't look very much like a meteorite...

Ladies and gentlemen, I have a grave announcement to make...one hundred and twenty known survivors...

"Citizens of the nation...with a nation united, courageous, and dedicated to the preservation of human supremacy on this earth".

2x2L calling CQ, come in please...isn't there *anyone* on the air?...

...you are listening to a dramatisation...

...the putrefactive and disease bacteria against which their systems were unprepared; slain, after all man's defenses had failed, by the humblest thing that God in his wisdom has put upon this earth...

...and if your doorbell rings and no one's there, that was no Martian - it's Halloween.

This is the Columbia Broadcasting System.

Billy
May 17, 2008 10:16 PM

Revelation 8:8-9
And something like a great mountain burning with fire was thrown into the sea, and a third of the sea became blood. And a third of the living creatures in the sea died, and a third of the ships were destroyed


The Bible says God is going to use something like this as part of His judgment upon those who reject Jesus as Savior and Lord. The heavens declare forth the glory of God.

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About Crunchy Con

Rod Dreher is an editorial columnist for the Dallas Morning News, and author of "Crunchy Cons" (Crown Forum), a nonfiction book about conservatives, most of them religious, whose faith and political convictions sometimes put them at odds with mainstream conservatives. The views expressed in this blog are his own.

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