Explosions in Beirut
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wrote on 4 Aug 2020, 18:55 last edited by
Windows were blown out of buildings 10 KILOMETERS away.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2020, 20:46 last edited by
Fox: "The health minister said at least 50 people were killed and over 2,700 were injured."
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wrote on 4 Aug 2020, 20:49 last edited by
It was heard from 180 miles away, north of Cyprus
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wrote on 4 Aug 2020, 22:00 last edited by
I don't know how accurate these calculations are, but somebody estimated that the blast of the supposed 2700 tons of ammonium nitrate correspond to around 1 kiloton of TNT. Hiroshima was around 16 kilotons. More modern atomic bombs can easily exceed 20 megatons. If one kiloton does this, I'd really prefer to not be anywhere near an exploding atomic bomb (ok, not a very surprising thought, but that blast gives you an appreciation of what a megaton TNT must be like.
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wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 00:53 last edited by
You know, sometimes it's best to put the cell phone down...
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wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 02:09 last edited by
Wow!!!
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I don't know how accurate these calculations are, but somebody estimated that the blast of the supposed 2700 tons of ammonium nitrate correspond to around 1 kiloton of TNT. Hiroshima was around 16 kilotons. More modern atomic bombs can easily exceed 20 megatons. If one kiloton does this, I'd really prefer to not be anywhere near an exploding atomic bomb (ok, not a very surprising thought, but that blast gives you an appreciation of what a megaton TNT must be like.
wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 02:33 last edited by@Klaus said in Explosions in Beirut:
I don't know how accurate these calculations are, but somebody estimated that the blast of the supposed 2700 tons of ammonium nitrate correspond to around 1 kiloton of TNT. Hiroshima was around 16 kilotons. More modern atomic bombs can easily exceed 20 megatons. If one kiloton does this, I'd really prefer to not be anywhere near an exploding atomic bomb (ok, not a very surprising thought, but that blast gives you an appreciation of what a megaton TNT must be like.
No kidding! Here’s some quick stats, I think are accurate in terms of yield TNT (in tons) equivalent:
- MOAB (our largest non-nuke) = 11
- Beirut = 1,000
- Hiroshima = 16,000
- Current nukes = 600,000 to 2,200,000
- Larry’s head if Biden wins = 14,000,000
- Mt St Helens = 26,000,000
- Tsar Bomb = 50,000,000
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@Klaus said in Explosions in Beirut:
I don't know how accurate these calculations are, but somebody estimated that the blast of the supposed 2700 tons of ammonium nitrate correspond to around 1 kiloton of TNT. Hiroshima was around 16 kilotons. More modern atomic bombs can easily exceed 20 megatons. If one kiloton does this, I'd really prefer to not be anywhere near an exploding atomic bomb (ok, not a very surprising thought, but that blast gives you an appreciation of what a megaton TNT must be like.
No kidding! Here’s some quick stats, I think are accurate in terms of yield TNT (in tons) equivalent:
- MOAB (our largest non-nuke) = 11
- Beirut = 1,000
- Hiroshima = 16,000
- Current nukes = 600,000 to 2,200,000
- Larry’s head if Biden wins = 14,000,000
- Mt St Helens = 26,000,000
- Tsar Bomb = 50,000,000
wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 02:35 last edited by -
wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 03:15 last edited by
Many videos coming out, this is a compilation.
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wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 03:16 last edited by
And this one. Look how loud it is, even if you’re “30 seconds away”. (Many miles)
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wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 03:21 last edited by
Wow.
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And this one. Look how loud it is, even if you’re “30 seconds away”. (Many miles)
wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 03:23 last edited by -
wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 11:36 last edited by
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wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 15:46 last edited by
@jon-nyc Wow
This was a terrible thing that happened, and I hesitate to say this, but I am glad that it was not terrorism.
(At least so far it does not appear to be).
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wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 15:51 last edited by
So far. Here's an explanation. Probably sadder than terrorism.
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/05/opinion/beirut-explosions.html
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wrote on 5 Aug 2020, 16:05 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Aug 2020, 12:49 last edited by
Fox: "[Former NSC spox Michael] Anton told guest host John Roberts the substance which ignited to cause the powerful blast was ammonium nitrate -- a key component of agricultural fertilizer that had been stored in a warehouse at Beirut's port since 2013, when it was offloaded from a Russian-leased ship that had made an unscheduled stop there.
"Officials have worried about this for years saying we have to get this out of here," Anton said. "This dragged on for seven years."
"Anton added that Lebanon's government has been in a state of turmoil for more than four decades and is neither completely functional, nor does it have full control of all of its territory."
More: https://www.foxnews.com/media/michael-anton-beirut-explosion-accident-waiting-happen