Surgeon General, Blockchain. July 23, 2021, Part 1
Science Friday
Science Friday and WNYC Studios
4.4 • 6.3K Ratings
🗓️ 23 July 2021
⏱️ 47 minutes
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| 0:00.0 | This is Science Friday. I'm Ira Flato. |
| 0:02.3 | Later in the hour, talking with the U.S. Surgeon General about vaccines, COVID, and health in the U.S. |
| 0:09.0 | But first, a wave of flooding around the world this week is throwing the spotlight on one of the predicted consequences of climate change. |
| 0:18.4 | Intense rainfall, flash flooding, loss of life as areas face an increasing |
| 0:23.6 | frequency and intensity of storms. Hundreds are dead and more are missing in Germany, Belgium, China, |
| 0:30.2 | Turkey, and Nigeria. And China's floods this week have been called thousand-year events. |
| 0:36.6 | Here to talk more about this and other stories is |
| 0:38.8 | Maggie Kerth, senior science writer for a 538. Always good to have you, Maggie. Thanks for having me |
| 0:45.6 | back. You know, I have seen some pretty terrible pictures from these floods as I'm sure you have. |
| 0:51.9 | Can you say more about how bad they've been? Yeah, so these are just |
| 0:58.0 | huge storms. The system that went across Europe, across Germany and Belgium, dropped six inches of |
| 1:04.0 | rain in 24 hours, and these flash floods killed at least 196 people. The floods in China, |
| 1:13.5 | those are even more staggering. So in the city of Zhengzhou, they had a year's worth of rain, more than 25 inches that fell in just three days. Reservoirs |
| 1:21.5 | were overflowing. There were these videos we could see people trying to pull other people out |
| 1:26.4 | of mudslides. |
| 1:35.5 | And there were some videos that were circulating around where you saw hundreds of people trapped on subway lines with water up to their necks. |
| 1:39.4 | Like they'd just bit on the subway and the flash flood had come through and inundated it. |
| 1:44.7 | We saw the floods in China being described as thousand-year floods, something that's only happening once every thousand years, but we're seeing 500-year floods, other places, 200-year |
| 1:51.2 | floods. |
| 1:52.2 | This is sort of becoming a name that doesn't mean so much anymore. |
| 1:55.5 | Right. |
| 1:56.5 | Yeah. |
... |
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