• IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    My greatest fear with the chaos and challenges that are going to happen over the next few decades in terms of environmental change is not the weather, not the heat, not the cold, not the tornadoes or hurricanes … the thing that scares me the most are people.

    As the environment becomes more extreme and we experience more and more emergencies, people are going to start panicking … panicked people are going to do some crazy things … the worse conditions get, the worse people will become.

    • Grimpen@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      The whole pandemic experience eroded my faith in humanity. There’s no doubt that when humanity works together, we can accomplish much. There is also no doubt in my mind that there’s somebody whose first thought is to hoard toilet paper.

      I suppose if we could all work together on enlightened harmony, the Kyoto Protocol would have fixed the climate back even it could have saved lots of people.

    • virr@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It isn’t the temperature, it’s the humidity.

      Wet bulb is a way measure how much evaporative cooling you can have. Once wet bulb gets to 95°F even a healthy fit individual will die given enough time even in the shade with a fan. It might be 112 but as long as the wet bulb stays below 95°F your body can cool with sweat. Any higher wet bulb the human body only heats up from the environment and can no longer cool, eventually leading to fatal hyperthermia (heat exhaustion and heat stroke).

    • jerkface@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      That is exactly the conditions humans are adapted for: high arid heat. We are the world champions of sweating to stay cool, but that does nothing in humid weather. At high humidity, the temperature only needs to be near body temperature to kill you.

    • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      That’s likely dry bulb temperature. Wet bulb temperature is lower except at 100% humidity

  • healthetank@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    One option, if you live somewhere where this is a likely event, is to prep an ice room - an underground room that is small, with thick well insulated walls. That alone will keep it ~5c which is good, but it can be lowered further by freezing blocks of ice and stocking the room up when the power goes out/heat waves hit.

    Note this requires a number of things - a large Chest freezer to freeze big blocks in (small blocks melt quicker. Bigger the block, the longer the room lasts). It also requires a basement you can modify, and a floor drain for when the ice slowly melts.

    It’s a lot of work and likely not worth it unless you Need to use it regularly, though with climate change it may become more useful. As always, consider radon readings in your basements, as well as a CO monitor. Bad air sinks, and the whole point of this is you don’t want to die

    • Moose@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      Essentially, your body cools you down by sweating, but if you reach a combination of sweat and heat above a certain degree, your body is unable to cool you down by sweating, as the air already has enough moisture and its hotter than your sweat.

      Then you lose the ability to regulate your heat and you rapidly head towards a heat stroke.

    • Hawke@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s the temperature a thermometer will get to through evaporative cooling. You measure it by putting a wet cloth on the bulb of a thermometer and letting the water evaporate.

  • Rhs519@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    a supply of chemical ice packs could work as a short term/emergency response. Use them to survive short term (hours/days) while you leave the area / get the power restored / AC fixed / or the heat breaks?

    They have a shelf life, but it’s 1-2 years, so you would have to stay on top of expiration.

  • ddugue@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Maybe I’m ignorant, but couldn’t you dig?

    I know that here (Canada) if you dig 6ft, temperature goes down to the year average, so here like 6c.

    You would do your outside activities in the night or at sunrise.

    But at that point the problem would probably be crops and wildlife dying en masse. So food would be the issue.

    If you want to survive, invest in fungus and cyanobacteria

    • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I do my own building, construction and renovation … did some commercial work but never enough to want to do it for a living … I know enough to do my own but not enough to call myself a pro.

      From what I’ve learned about underground building is that it is very dangerous and a health hazard. You have to constantly monitor and create safety measures for gases and oxygen levels. Even with the best setups … actually with super sealed setups … it can be very dangerous without active monitoring. Carbon dioxide, monoxide, and many gases will naturally want to drift to lower levels and displace oxygen which wants to move up … if you happen to be unlucky to have a generator or car running next to your exit/entry hole … your underground space quickly loses oxygen and without monitoring equipment or alarms, you just get dizzy, fall asleep and die … very gentle death because you will never know what happened.

      There was a news story a year or two ago … in Australia I think? … of a farmer that crawled into an underground reservoir that was empty to repair it … his generator or vehicle was running nearby and he lost consciousness inside and died … it’s actually a common enough occurrence for farmers and industrial workers and construction workers

      Anyone who is even thinking of building anything underground has to know and understand this dangerous fact