In 1980, 16 shipwrecked Danish fishermen were hauled to safety after an hour and a half in the frigid North Sea. They then walked across the deck of the rescue ship, stepped below for a hot drink, and dropped dead, all 16 of them.
This is from that article about hypothermia that went around this morning. Crazy.
This is an amazing and terrifying read. This part is fascinating too:
Were you a Norwegian fisherman or Inuit hunter, both of whom frequently work gloveless in the cold, your chilled hands would open their surface capillaries periodically to allow surges of warm blood to pass into them and maintain their flexibility. This phenomenon, known as the hunter’s response, can elevate a 35-degree skin temperature to 50 degrees within seven or eight minutes.
Other human adaptations to the cold are more mysterious. Tibetan Buddhist monks can raise the skin temperature of their hands and feet by 15 degrees through meditation. Australian aborigines, who once slept on the ground, unclothed, on near-freezing nights, would slip into a light hypothermic state, suppressing shivering until the rising sun rewarmed them.
3 months ago Short URL 78 notes
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backyardharvest likes this
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urbanreliance reblogged this from climateadaptation and added:
Interesting.
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mry-j reblogged this from climateadaptation and added:
excellent writing; def. worth a read.
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totallysic reblogged this from climateadaptation and added:
This is a really amazing, really terrifying article to read, especially for somebody studying Antarctica like me. These...
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ginaste reblogged this from jhermann and added:
eugh
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sinatragal reblogged this from climateadaptation and added:
This is an amazing read. And a terrifying situation to be in, I can now imagine.
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wolodymyr reblogged this from climateadaptation and added:
How does hypothermia work?
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notesnsailboats reblogged this from climateadaptation and added:
awesome writing
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climateadaptation reblogged this from jhermann and added:
Via jhermann
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