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Fallout Shelter™nuclear threat advisor

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You're at home watching TV, after dinner. The screen turns to static and the sky lights up. A nuclear weapon has just exploded. Should you run for the basement or head for the car? If you take shelter, when is it safe to come out? Is there anything you could have done to make your family safer other than moving to Tuktoyaktuk?

When a nuclear weapon explodes, a shock wave is formed which can hurl bodies and level buildings. If the burst occurs near the ground, the point of contact is vaporized. In or over water, massive waves swell. Thermal radiation can cause fires, retinal scarring, flash blindness, and burns. The electromagnetic pulse (EMP) emitted from a nuclear burst disrupts electrical and electronic equipment. Nuclear radiation can lead to radiation sickness, cancer, leukemia, sterility, genetic defects, etc.

That's the bad news. There's a lot of good news, though.

Suppose you live in Boston. How can you know that a lethal biological agent wasn't released in San Francisco last week? Perhaps someone infected with it flew to Logan Airport and passed it on to you. And now you are unknowingly passing on to your loved ones.

Many people had these fears during the recent anthrax panic.

On the other hand, imagine a nuclear device is exploded over San Francisco. There's no uncertainty. We know it happened, and we know where and when. You can anticipate how you will be affected, and take steps to protect yourself and those you care about.

Look at the nested rings. The bomb explodes in the center. (Of course, in a real attack, the shape and width of each danger zone would be different.)

[concentric circles of nuclear attack danger zones, black at center]

     [nuclear attack black zone]Deadly
     [nuclear attack red zone]Survival is possible
     [nuclear attack yellow zone]Survival is likely
     [nuclear attack green zone]Safe     

Near ground zero (black), destruction is essentially total. Unless you're in Cheyenne Mountain or equivalent, your only strategy for survival is be somewhere else.

In the red zone, you can survive the weapon's effects but will have to start preparing for it now. In the yellow zone, effects are reduced. If you didn't get around to making preparations, you may be able to improvise a safe shelter from materials that you ordinarily have around. In both zones, your focus is first hour-to-hour, then day-to-day.

In the green, you're far enough away that the only direct effect of a weapon you'll experience is that you may have a few percent higher risk of cancer 20 years down the road. Your preparations should focus on the ripple effects of an attack. Maybe the ATM system will be down, or the drug store won't be able to restock a prescription drug you need, or all planes will be grounded. The more prepared you are for an interruption in the goods and services you rely on, the easier it will be for you to cope.

Which zone is your home in? What about work? Where you travel to on business or take your vacation? Where your best friend is?

Grim as the prospect may be, it's better to think about this stuff now. Now you have the time to think your situation through, make decisions, and make preparations.

What targets are near you? Are you close enough to be at risk for fires from the thermal radiation? Do you need to clear the dry grass by your house? Where would you take shelter? How much radiation shielding does it provide? Can you easily add to the shielding? How long would you need to stay in the shelter? Do you have enough food and water to last?

These are not questions you want to first consider while a shock wind is hurling debris at you....

The easy part is Fallout Shelter. Fallout Shelter uses the best unclassified data available to predict the magnitude, timing, and implications of nuclear effects on people, property, and livestock in the vicinity of a burst. So you know what to expect when.

For about the price of a good smoke detector, you can make better decisions to protect your family, business, or community.

still interested?

If you want to be notified as soon as Fallout Shelter is available for your computer, tell us.

The Palm OS release will require Palm OS 2.0 or higher, which runs on handheld computers from Acer, Garmin, HandSpring, Kyocera, Nokia, Palm, Samsung, Sony, and Symbol.

Fallout Shelter, Palm Edition will sell for $28.95 US. (Other currencies)

not interested?


[Fallout Shelter logo]

recent threat news

recent C-SPAN video coverage

4/25/02New York on nuclear alert after blast

4/23/02Russia may build nuclear power plant near, not in, North Korea

4/22/02White House Hasn't Sought Money to Guard Atomic Plants, Energy Official Says

4/15/02UK reveals nuclear bomb plans

4/15/02Pentagon Optimistic About Missile Shield

4/11/02Al Qaeda sought nuclear scientists

4/6/02Skies still aren't secure

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4/3/02Homeland defense flawed, GAO warns

3/28/02North Korea hiding nukes in underground bunkers

3/27/02Russian nuclear minister pledges to complete reactor deal with Iran

3/27/02 Report Cites Unaccounted Plutonium: Amounts Sufficient to Create 'Dirty Bomb,' Official Says article no longer on Washington Post site

3/26/02India rules out nuclear war

3/25/02N Korea eyes Russia as nuclear partner

3/25/02Security at U.S. Reactors Criticized by Congressman

3/20/02U.S. Concludes Al Qaeda Lacked a Chemical or Biological Stockpile

3/19/02 Intelligence chiefs testify before the Senate Armed Services Committee on current threat:

George J. Tenet, Director of the CIApdf format

Vice Admiral Thomas R. Wilson, Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)pdf format

3/18/02Terror convicts told of nuclear threats

3/18/02FBI Alerts Allies on Al Qaeda's Nuclear Plans

3/18/02Despite New Tools, Detecting Nuclear Material Is Doubtful

3/18/02Makings of a 'Dirty Bomb'Radioactive Devices Left by Soviets Could Attract Terrorists

Older articles...


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