TrackSectionLength
101 - Section 115:21
202 - Section 224:14
303 - Section 315:58

Notes
Read by: Allyson Hester
Book Coordinator: Allyson Hester
Meta Coordinator:  Leon Mire
Proof Listener: Kehinde

Artwork
Cover: Nuclear winter, image from Wikimedia Commons, author unknown
Inset: CIA maps showing global temperature changes after a nuclear winter. From  "The Soviet Approach to Nuclear Winter", December 1984.
Inset: Logo of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency
Insert image: Primary target locations for Soviet nuclear strikes during 1980s. The resulting fall-out is indicated with the darkest considered as “lethal” to relatively fall-out free yellow zones. March 2, 2011, Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Insert image: Nuclear warhead stockpiles of the United States and the Soviet Union/Russia, 1945-2014. Wikimedia Commons.

Recordings
These recordings were made using the author’s original published work, which is in the public domain. The readings were recorded by members and volunteers of Librivox.org, which has generously made the recordings available to the public domain. The audio files have been lightly edited and have been engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. While Librivox condones the sale and distribution of these recordings, it is not associated with the management or operations of MP3 Audiobook Classics.  



Recognizing that most research done on the effects of nuclear weapons had focused on short term consequences, in 1974 the United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency commissioned the National Academy of Sciences to produce a study that became Long-Term Worldwide Effects of Multiple Nuclear Weapons Detonations. The highly technical report ran to over 200 pages, so the Agency produced an abbreviated version of the study which conveyed its essential findings along with information from other studies and basic background facts.  The Academy found that a massive attack with multiple detonations was likely to create such widespread and long-lasting environmental damage that an aggressor nation would itself suffer serious environmental effects even without a response. Perhaps the most compelling conclusion is that existing knowledge is largely based on theory and hypothesis and so uncertainty as to the consequences is the central truth. We just don’t really know what would happen, and that alone should serve as a deterrent.  The report presents the findings in language that common people can understand; scientific background is not necessary.


Play sample: 

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Item Info
EAN - DVD case 0701236969429
EAN - CD jacket 0687700170778
Media MP3 CD
Package DVD Case
Author The United States Arms Control and Disarmament Agency
Year 1975
Recording
Read by Allyson Hester
Length 55 minutes
Type of Reading Solo

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Worldwide Effects of Nuclear War: Some Perspectives

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(SKU DB-1223) (EAN 0701236969429 )
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