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Where did the birds go? |
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| May10-08, 10:22 PM | #1 |
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Where did the birds go?
Hi everyone,
I posted this here because I am not sure what category is appropriate. Ok, here is the problem: Most of you are probably familiar with the historical records as they apply to the bombing of Hiroshima during WW2. I have been studying this period for a very long time and I can't seem to find any evidence of dead birds at Hiroshima after the bombing. The historical record says that the destruction there was the product of a near-instantaneous high altitude blast of great magnitude. Hiroshima has 7 water deltas entering the city which suggests to me the presence of multitudes of birds especially seagulls. Why no birds scattered in the streets, why no bird shadows on walls or streets, where did they go and how could they leave before the blast? Any help would be greatly appreciated. I have other physics questions on this same topic so I would like to know where they should be posted, thank you. |
| May10-08, 10:35 PM | #2 |
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Birds in the air would probably have been blown away by the blast and the bodies scatered over a wide area where they would have been eaten by cats/dogs/rats etc.
Birds nearby would probably have been burnt to nothing, it doesn't take much to completely destroy a small bird - if my experience barbecuing chicken legs is any guide! |
| May10-08, 10:53 PM | #3 |
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Even people disintegrated when they were close to the explosion. So birds would disintegrate as well. I did see a picture with a horse that had died but I really think the focus was more on the people, so even if animals did die, it wasn't their main priority.
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| May10-08, 10:54 PM | #4 |
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Where did the birds go? |
| May10-08, 10:59 PM | #5 |
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| May11-08, 12:08 AM | #6 |
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I was refering to the birds that were at the epicenter at the time of the blast. Those, would have had the same fate as the humans in the vicinity at the time. factors that may have affected this would be: bird size, bird concentrations something that I found below |
| May11-08, 12:14 AM | #7 |
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Solved: http://ussslcca25.com/crosroad.htm
Search the page (middle of it) for the info which talks of this. Only 10% of the animals died from the impact. The rest survived. The rest died later from the radiation. (slowly) |
| May11-08, 12:15 AM | #8 |
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| May11-08, 05:25 AM | #9 |
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From: only allowed to post URLs to other sites after you have made 15 posts or more. |
| May11-08, 05:32 AM | #10 |
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| May11-08, 05:42 AM | #11 |
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| May11-08, 05:52 AM | #12 |
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| May11-08, 07:33 AM | #13 |
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Even if no single explanation is satisfactory to you, try considering them all at the same time. I hope you are not predetermined to find the outcome you want in the first place.
I for one have no problem with not seeing birds in those photographs. If you intend to produce evidence for birds' preternatural ability to sense imminent disaster (or anything like that), then you have a bit more work to do in order to convince me. A songbird is small. I rarely notice a dead bird, even a relatively large one like a robin, until I am practically standing over it. I have also noticed that when I have seen a dead seagull or duck floating in the water, I can't tell what it is until it is very close. Dead birds do not look like birds; half their volume appears to be their puffed feathers. When the feathers are wet or otherwise flattened, they appear very different. So to say that there are " no birds" in any of the hundreds of photos you have looked at, then an enormous burden of proof is on you to show that every single object (including anything that might look like a stone, or a crumpled piece of cardboard) is NOT a bird. That is an exhausting task, I know, and nearly impossible since the resolution of most of those photos would not be able to definitively show a distinction between a two-inch clod of dirt and a finch that had been knocked out of the sky. |
| May11-08, 09:30 AM | #14 |
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I imagine at the time and for the interest level that birds weren't very high on the 'importance' level to be photographed or documented.
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| May11-08, 11:38 AM | #15 |
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As others have suggested, what is the resolution of the photographs you are examining? Old black and white photos from the WWII era are usually grainy at best. If the shot is a wide enough angle to have captured any birds in addition to people in the area of the photograph, the size and resolution of the photo may simply have been inadequate for the birds to be clearly seen. Likewise, if the photos are close-up shots, birds may have been excluded from the photo to keep the focus on the people.
Here's the way this site works. The person making a specific claim has the burden of proof to support their claim. If you're claiming there are no birds in photographs, then the burden of proof is on you to convince us this is really the case, that there really are no birds in those photographs...such as by providing links to examples of photographs where we can consider if there is any reason to expect to be able to find birds in them even if they were present. You're asking us to explain why there were no birds, but have not met your burden of proof that there weren't any. There may be no explanation if there was no absence of birds in the first place. |
| May11-08, 11:58 AM | #16 |
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Someone can take 1000 photographs in any city and not have birds in them; and, maybe 10,000 photos out in some 'desert' and not have birds in those either.
-------------- I guess what I'm asking is: is there a specific reason why you are so interested in looking for birds in the photos? and, why so defensive at the suggestions given? |
| May11-08, 07:14 PM | #17 |
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