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Thumbnail for October 15, 2006: Climate and Extinction - Peter Ward | Hawaii Earthquake - Stan Deyo

October 15, 2006: Climate and Extinction - Peter Ward | Hawaii Earthquake - Stan Deyo

Oct 15, 2006
2h 39m
0:00 / 0:00
Art Bell opens with breaking coverage of a 6.6 magnitude earthquake that struck Hawaii, then speaks with earthquake researcher Stan Deyo and paleontologist Peter Ward across a broadcast packed with natural disasters and deep science. From Manila, Art reports on widespread damage across the Hawaiian islands, power outages on Oahu, and takes calls from residents on the Big Island describing shattered glass, shifted homes, and relentless aftershocks.

Stan Deyo explains that his Navy-derived seismic stress data detected signals west of Hawaii days before the quake. He raises concerns about the unusual pattern of aftershocks resembling a collapsing caldera edge and warns of potential stress building toward the San Francisco coast. The conversation touches on whether the quake could trigger volcanic eruptions or further instability beneath the islands.

Peter Ward, professor of biology and earth sciences at the University of Washington, shifts the focus to mass extinction. He describes how oxygen levels have swung dramatically over Earth history, argues that dinosaurs evolved specifically as low-oxygen specialists, and warns that rising carbon dioxide could push oceans into toxic hydrogen sulfide production. Ward points to growing oceanic dead zones as early evidence that the conditions behind past extinction events may be returning.

Key Moments

  1. Transcript

    Stan Deyo: Hawaii quake may presage volcanic eruption: Deyo says the rapid run of 50 aftershocks suggests something flimsy in the plate, possibly a magma chamber, and warns eruptive action could follow.

  2. Transcript

    Could a Hawaiian island fall into the sea?: Art asks whether a chamber collapse beneath Hawaii could drop an island; Deyo admits the same thought crossed his mind and calls it a worry.

  3. Transcript

    Conveyor belt shutdown and ocean dead zones: Peter Ward explains that a slowing thermohaline conveyor would dump oxygen-poor water on ocean bottoms, building dead zones where toxic bacteria gas the planet.

  4. Transcript

    No fix without world government: Ward relays climatologist David Battisti's grim conclusion: real action requires a world government, which only a biblical-scale catastrophe will produce.

  5. Transcript

    NASA scientist muzzled on global warming: Ward describes astrobiology funding being cut and a senior NASA climate scientist muzzled by White House order, as Art asks whether bad climate news is being suppressed.

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