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The Bionic Anticipation of Natural Disasters

Helmut Tributsch   

  1. Hahn-Meitner-Institut, Dept. Solare Energetik, 14109 Berlin, Germany
  • Received:1900-01-01 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2005-09-30 Published:1900-01-01
  • Contact: Helmut Tributsch

Abstract: After major natural disasters, such as the recent earthquake-tsunami event in South Asia, reports appear about the mysterious ability of animals to anticipate and to escape the impending danger. This is an opportunity to recall the long history of this phenomenon in the traditions of different civilizations, to evaluate Chinese efforts, 30-40 years ago, to use this phenomenon for earthquake prediction, and to judge its state of acceptance in modern science. An effort is made to introduce this phenomenon as a research field of modern bionics. The timing is favorable since, increasingly, infrared thermal anomalies, monitored from satellite, suggesting litho-atmospheric processes, are found to precede earthquakes. They were unexpected by seismologists and are here suggested to essentially reflect the energy conversion patterns responsible for the signals monitored by animals. The aim is to learn from animals in the long term how natural disasters can better be anticipated, and how simple technical warning systems can be developed. Some challenges are analyzed. One is interpretation of the nature of energy release prior to the main earthquake disaster resulting in “macro-anomaly” precursors, another is better to understand the effect on animal senses. The role of non-linear cooperative phenomena including tsunami-type waves is emphasized.

Key words: animal sensory systems, natural disaster anticipation, earthquakes, tsunami, cooperative phenomena, thermal anomalies