Guy Fawkes' Explosion Would Have Devasted London 546
Anonymous Coward writes "Experts at the University of Wales in Aberystwyth have worked out for the first time the true extent of the damage Guy Fawkes would have caused if his daring deed had not been foiled on November 5, 1605. " Sorry - history geek/major in me coming out, but this is definitiely one of those major points in history when things Could Have Gone Differently.
My old uni! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:My old uni! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:My old uni! (Score:2, Funny)
Ah yes! East Anglia Polytechnic in 'naughty' Norwich. Man, thoe BBQs were something else...
Re:My old uni! (Score:5, Funny)
Might as well kill yourself now, you have nothing to look forward to.
Re:My old uni! (Score:4, Informative)
Nope [slashdot.org].
Future (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Future (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Has any of you noticed... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Future (Score:3, Funny)
it happened in 1605. How exactly was it a frightening day for you, again?
Re:Future (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Future (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Future (Score:5, Interesting)
Some years ago I was given a book about the Gunpowder plot, which sets the context. After the death of Elizabeth I, there was hope among the English Catholics that life would get better. Instead, James I set up what was effectively an inquisition, and appoined Popplewell to turn the screws down even tighter. My family were tucked away in North Yorkshire, and got away with a series of fines, but many English Catholic families had members executed - the English Martyrs. That's why even in today's more ecumenical time I'm not ashamed to sing "Our fathers chained in prisons dark were still in heart and conscience free".
Yes, a splinter group decided to resort to violence, and yes that was totally unforgiveable, but there is a lesson which should not be ingored.
Dunstan Vavasour
well at least (Score:5, Funny)
CJC
Re:well at least (Score:5, Insightful)
As a UK 'citizen' who is 'lucky' enough to see the current load of self-serving, jeering, ignorant political whores performing live, I can confirm the parent post is true!
Re:well at least (Score:5, Funny)
Re:well at least (Score:3, Funny)
Cheers,
Slak
The Article's ending says it all (Score:3, Insightful)
*If* he had it packed in
_Then_ it would've had same effect as TNT
(and so blasted about a km big hole)
So this is a GOOD model.
yada yada.
Seriously, the assumptions they have made are just too far-fetched. It sounds like someone thought of this idea - hey what would've happened if.. -- and then did some calculations, and then put it in a sensational manner to get press.
As Dick Feynman would say, this is something like Cargo Cult Science - no true scientific backing for this
Sometimes the experts know what they are doing. (Score:5, Interesting)
*If* he was an expert,
There's a link at the end of the article where they point out that Fawkes was brought into the plot because...he was an expert in gunpowder.
*If* he had it packed in
This was not a spur of the moment event. There was more than enough time to ensure the gunpowder was correctly placed and packed.
Re:Sometimes the experts know what they are doing. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The Article's ending says it all (Score:2)
No kidding? And on November 5th too.
About 90% of the science stories you hear about have been the subject of media spin, which is why you hear about them in the first place.
Black Powder is not a high explosive (Score:4, Informative)
My BS detector needle is hugging the high end again!!!!
FWIW, a high explosive is one where the detonation wave exceeds the speed of sound in the explosive so that it blows up, so to speak before it flies apart. High explosives do not need compression, but low-explosives do. This is why black powder goes off in a phut unless it is compressed so that it doesn't fly apart until all parts are reacting.
Done later anyway (Score:4, Informative)
And let's not forget the South Bank ;-)
Re:Done later anyway (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Done later anyway (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Done later anyway (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Done later anyway (Score:2)
In other news.... (Score:5, Funny)
More Guy Fawkes Info (Score:2)
www.bonfirenight.net [bonfirenight.net]
No karma whoring to see here...move along.
BBC website (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:BBC website (Score:5, Interesting)
Googling found this [bonefire.org] link, which mentions the price of gunpowder at the time being far to expensive for the conspirators to afford the amount they had. There is also doubt on the origins of the letter that tipped off authorities to the plot.
Another [cambs.sch.uk] site states the following:
I couldn't find any really compelling links, certainally none as good as the documentary.
Re:BBC website (Score:3, Interesting)
Gun powder = TNT (Score:3, Insightful)
So TNT is no better then gunpowder? What is so special with this guys gunpowder?
Re:Gun powder = TNT (Score:2)
Re:Gun powder = TNT (Score:4, Informative)
Dunk gunpowder in water. Won't burn. Hit it. Boom. Apply a small spark (like static from your sweater.) Boom. Put a pile of it in the open. Shhhh! - a big cloud of smoke, some sparks, some bright fire, no explosion. (only puting it in relatively small chamber - like a gun, a barrel or a cellar, depending on amount - causes considerable explosion. Otherwise it just burns quite rapidly.
Re:Gun powder = TNT (Score:3, Informative)
dynamite = Nobel's brand of nitroglycerine in clay explosive. Other people made similar, out of other kinds of clay, using wood pulp as binder, etc. No one makes much use of dynamite anymore; Commercial blasting explosives are all TNT, nitro
Wasn't he framed? (Score:3, Interesting)
I also understand that Brits seem to have tossed out the whole Nov 5th thing for the more commercial American import of Halloween, but haven't really picked up on the concept, with many kids showing up on pumpkinless doorsteps sans costume.
Seems to me that Guy Fawkes Night would be a much bigger blast!
Re:Wasn't he framed? (Score:2)
Re:Wasn't he framed? (Score:2)
Re:Wasn't he framed? (Score:2)
I can't wait to hear Jingle Bells this year too. November is here, can't be long now. The 13 year old boys in my area have such great singing voices. The outstretched hand they also provide adds to the festive jollies.
Now if one of them was to knock on the door asking if he can wash my car for money then that would be a different story.
Very sad, it is. Damn
Re:Wasn't he framed? (Score:3, Informative)
Not really. November 5th is still a bigger night in the U.K than Halloween; we spend UKP80million a year on fireworks, most of them for November 5th. Sales of plastic horns and Scream masks pall in comparision really.
What tends to happen is that Halloween simply ge
Re:Wasn't he framed? (Score:4, Informative)
Very funny [bbc.co.uk] diatribe about 20 minutes into last week's Now Show (radio 4 comedy programme) about this very matter.
Re:Wasn't he framed? (Score:3, Informative)
Was Guy Fawkes Framed? find out here! [herts.sch.uk]
Since it may be my namesake's festival, I have to correct you on the "American Import" bit... [about.com]
Re:Wasn't he framed? (Score:2, Informative)
The Whole Story (Score:2)
www.bonfirenight.net [bonfirenight.net]
tinyurl.com/tnu3 [tinyurl.com]
Henry the VIII, King of Nookie (Score:2)
Henry got plenty of nookie -- lots and lots.
What he didn't have was an heir to the throne -- a child (preferably male) born to a woman who happened to be his wife.
From the article: (Score:4, Funny)
"We know that the more explosive we have the more energy will be released when the charge is set off.
"From the pressure pulse generated by the explosion, we can tell if windows are going to be smashed or if whole buildings will be demolished," he said.
He explained that the further from the blast the lesser the effects until only a faint bang is audible.
Obviously they had their top minds working on this.
Damn, you beat me to it! (Score:4, Funny)
That's the first thing that came to my mind, too. I think he's also a founding member of the Royal Society For Putting Things On Top Of Other Things.
Well, it did happen in 2000 in Enschede... (Score:5, Interesting)
At may 13th 2000, a fireworks storage facility (located in the middle of a residential area, of all places) in the city of Enschede in the east of the Netherlands went skyhigh. Some general info is here [wikipedia.org].
Whereas the London event would have been equivalent to 2.5 tons of TNT, the Enschede explosion was estimated as being equivalent to anywhere between 5 tons and 15 tons of TNT (between 2e10 and 6e10 Joules, and at maximum about 1/1000th of Hiroshima in terms of energy). In the event, about 100000 kg of fireworks detonated, set off by a detonation in one of the central containers. The energy in the explosion was estimated by analyzing images of the shockfront wave set off by the explosion.
The result was similar to what has been predicted for London: in Enschede, about 1200 houses were obliterated [bbc.co.uk] and 22 were killed.
Fortunately, the event led to changes in legislation and much stricter requirements for such dangerous storage facilities near residential areas.
On a personal note: I was about 6 km from Ground Zero when the event happened, and the sound from the explosion was very, very impressive even at that distance!
Halifax Explosion (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Halifax Explosion (Score:4, Insightful)
Remember, the Manhattan project dealt with explosive forces heretofor unreckoned with in history. No one was really sure if a blast of that magnitude would be substantialy dampened by man made obstructions.
The afforementioned incident provided a passable model wherein one could reason that buildings could act as a sheild to a several ton explosion, there was no evidence to suggest that this would not be true for a several kiloton explosion as well.
Think of it this way. Oppenheimer didn't use this case study as a reason to detonate the bomb in the air, but rather a reason not to detonate it on the ground.
Re:Halifax Explosion (Score:5, Informative)
From http://www.halifaxfiremuseum.org/ [halifaxfiremuseum.org]
And again on September 21st 2001 in Toulouse (Score:2)
Toulouse Explosion Losses May Total $840 Million [insurancejournal.com]
there is one minor problem here... (Score:2, Interesting)
The explosion model assumes Fawkes was an expert in explosives and would have packed the barrels really tight instead of just using the barrels as is...so by that logic there would have been more gunpowder there than historical attributed.
Re:there is one minor problem here... (Score:2)
According to the BBC article [bbc.co.uk] Guy Fawkes' job was packing gunpowder for the army, so it's not unreasonable to assume he knew what he was doing.
Vasts (Score:3, Funny)
What's wrong with that? I hate vasts! Out with the vasts!
(Apparently, you're history buffs, but not spelling buffs.)
"What if?" Try "Remember when ..." (Score:5, Interesting)
The Halifax Explosion [wikipedia.org] is one of the most impressive disasters in history. Often billed as the largest non-nuclear explosion prior to the atomic age, two ships, one loaded with war ammunition, collided right in the middle of Halifax Harbour in Nova Scotia. It exploded, killing over 1600 people. The anchor from one of the ships was found 5 kilometers away. The explosion shattered windows and rang churchbells in my hometown of Truro, over 100 km away.
University/School (Score:3, Funny)
.
RIAA math (Score:3, Funny)
Or 1,250 really, really fast CD-Rs.
I don't get it. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it. (Score:5, Informative)
That's why effigies of Mr Fawkes are burnt as part of the celebrations.
Of course, given that Mr Fawkes represented the oppressed (at the time) Roman Catholic community, was he a terrorist, or a freedom fighter?
Re:I don't get it. (Score:5, Insightful)
You can get in trouble for thinking unpatriotic thoughts like that.
So I'll get into even greater trouble. The phrases freedom fighter/terrorist describe the same people from different viewpoints. The person getting freedom fighted calls them terrorist. Those who use terror call themselves freedom fighters.
Of course the real qualifier is what means they use and what ends they want to achieve (the means being more important than the ends in judging whether they are acting for good or evil IMHO).
The Resistance movement in Europe was called terrorist by the Gestapo. Old resistance fighter readily admit using terror tactics against the Nazis. They are proud of the fear they raised amongst the murdering invaders.
The Polish underground even used anthrax to discourage the Gestapo from reading anonymuous tipoff letters!
Re:I don't get it. (Score:2)
Because he was caught. There is a certain amount of ironic humour creeping in as people start to wonder just how bad an idea it was, though.
TWW
Re:I don't get it. (Score:2, Funny)
Blow up Parliament? Have a party.
Fail to blow up Parliament? Have a party.
It's all the same.
After working with explosives a little bit... (Score:2)
The problem is that the conditions were far from ideal for maximum damage to the city. The article mentions that the gunpowder was under the building, which means underground. When something explodes either buried or in a ditch it explodes up not out.
I have no doubt it would have demolished the building it was under, but I have sincer
Come again? (Score:2)
No shit Sherlock!
Child's play (Score:5, Informative)
On November 27, 1944, there was an accident and it blew up.
This is the supposedly the largest non-nuclear explosion in recorded history.
3670 tons of bombs went up in an explosion that was seismically recordable in Casablanca
The crater was half a mile across.
78 people killed.
A photo:
http://www.historicairphotos.com/g_uk/ima
Some informative links with other photos:
http://www.carolyn.topmum.net/tutbury/fauld/fau
http://freespace.virgin.net/kehla.barnes/disast
Re:Child's play (Score:4, Funny)
"Hmmm...strange these all have their detonators still installed. Meh, no matter."
Needed to be quoted here (Score:3, Funny)
"In one of the more peculiar of English habits, Guy Fawkes is celebrated with his own day of national remembrance for his role in a failed scheme to dispose of King James I and the House of Lords. You'd think they'd celebrate the foiler of the attempt rather than one of its enactors, but then "1st Earl of Salisbury Day" or "Lord Monteagle Day" just don't have the same ring."
Devastated *London*? (Score:3, Interesting)
As to the response, well, we have a good parallel for that, don't we? Guy Fawkes launched a religiously motivated attack at heart of the the "infidel" symbol of power. So did Usama bin Laden, and given what happened there, in the context of the times another knee-jerk purge of English Catholisism would almost certainly have ensued.
The Slimy Stuarts (Score:5, Interesting)
So anyway, some surmise that his advisers knew nothing would prove his non-Catholicism better than some Catholic zealot trying to kill him. Of course that was the result, that the C of E English largely accepted James I until his death as loyal both in terms of religion and nationality. Of course things went a little differently for his son (and grandson too)...
As a European historian, I've always found Stuart England and its brief reprieve during the Commonwealth to be the most fascinating part of English history. Perhaps it's because they were just so untrustworthy and untrusted...
I question this. (Score:3, Interesting)
Um. There are two general categories of explosives; low-order and high-order. When someone says "high explosives," they are technically referring to the latter, or they are misusing the term. Different explosive compounds burn at different rates; the gases given off by the burn is what produces the force of the blast. The faster the rate of burn, the more destructive an explosive compound is, all other things being equal. Gunpowder, which is meant to propel projectiles, burns slowly and therefore is low-order explosive. If it burned too quickly, the projectile wouldn't have time to accelerate and get out of the way, and pressure would spike inside the cannon/barrel....BOOM! This is why nobody makes bullets that are propelled by dynamite or C4. TNT, on the other hand, is not intended for this use, but is rather intended to blow things up; it has a much faster burn rate, and is a high-order explosive.
So, with that said, how the hell can 2,500 kilograms of 17th-century gunpowder have the same destructive force as the same amount of 20th-century TNT?
How come they didn't have this at my school? (Score:4, Funny)
Centre for Explosion Studies!! Now there is a cool major.
Bob: Hi, what's your major?
Jane: Theater. How about you?
Bob: Explosion Studies.
Jane: Wow, that is soooo cool. Wanna go out tonight?
Doesn't work that way with CS I can tell you. Seriously, was there ever a cooler thing to major in? I would have even dropped out of CS to be able to blow things up. They also get to study all the great explosions of all time.
I wonder what kind of job Explosive majors get? Cool stuff like special effects, building demolition, pyrotechniques, rodent control. I think I missed my true calling in life.
Re:How come they didn't have this at my school? (Score:3, Interesting)
Friend of mine's brother-in-law burns things for a living. Every day he gets to burn something or blow some shit up and get paid for it. Now and then they'll go out into the desert, build a house, and burn it down.
He's the happiest guy I think I've ever met.
Explosive Studies (Score:3, Funny)
I'm guessing to get a degree there you simply have to be alive at the end of the programme.
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:3, Informative)
Actually in 1605, Parliament was on the periphery of London. Back in those days, London was still concentrated around the original "City of London" -- a few miles downstream from Westminster. Almost the entire population lived and worked in or just outside "the City" (today it's the financial district of London). Linking the Houses of Parliament and the City was the Strand, which was lined by aristocrat's mansions, and (nearer to parliament) Whitehall, then the site of the main royal palace. So the devasta
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:3, Informative)
Huh? Our Senators are cowards who stay at home and have 'voice votes' when its time to pay their owners. See DMCA vote or yesterday's 87 billion Iraq vote. Almost 90 senators stayed home for the Iraq vote.
Sorry to get OT, but voice votes are as close to a bomb as far as democracy is concerned.
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:3)
True, but actually the effects of a large gunpowder explosion in the London of 1605 would likely be a lot more devastating [luminarium.org] than you, or the article, suggest.
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:2)
London might have had a population of only 75000 people in 1605, but an explosion with a blast radius of 1/3 of a mile and a damage radius of 2/3 of a mile right in the centre of the city would have probably killed and wounded more people than the WTC attack did.
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:2)
More like 200,000 [sru.edu].
Re:Not much to destroy (Score:5, Interesting)
Quoting from the article
Bear in mind that even if only a few thousand people died in the initial explosion (there were hundreds of MPs in westminster, plus all the support staff) that there weren't firemen in the same sense as we have now. There would probably have been a fire sweeping london, like Great Fire of 1666:
"On Sunday morning, the 2nd September 1666, the destruction of medieval London began. Within 5 days the city which Shakespeare had known was destroyed by fire. An area of one and a half miles by half a mile lay in ashes; 373 acres inside the city walls and 63 acres outside, 87 churches destroyed (including St. Paul's Cathedral) and 13,200 houses." source [angliacampus.com]
That fire started in a bakery. I think that Guy Fawkes could have done pretty well too.
Re:"Devasted?" (Score:2)
Re:"Devasted?" (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
You recall correctly. (Score:2)
Gunpowder != TNT (Score:5, Informative)
Not even close. TNT is "tri-nitro toluene", is a pale yellow crystalline, aromatic hydrocarbon compound that melts at 81 C. It is way more stable than nitroglycerine (not related to gunpowder either). The specific combustion energy of TNT is 4.6 MJ/kg. I'm not sure what gunpowder formula Fawkes used, but I doubt that it could have been as effective as TNT.
Huge Difference (Score:5, Informative)
TNT, or tri-nitro-toluene, is a high explosive. It detonates, producing a violent shock wave.
High explosives are more violent in their effects than low explosives. That's why they are so popular with the military. They do a better job of breaking things.
Re:Huge Difference (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe that any compound or chemical which has speed of oxidation that exceeds the speed of sound within the medium itself constitutes an explosive due to the formation of a concussive shockwave. Ignoring nuclear nasties, this lets out CO2 bombs and such and confines itself to chemical reactions. However, the fact that the rate of deflagration (burning) of gunpowder confined in a moderately compressed form such as a wooden shipping barrel WILL give a heck of a concussive effec
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
It qould have destroyed the Houses of Parliament, including all the MPS, the Lords and the King who were there for the state opening of parliament; Westminster Abbey; and the main royal palaces of Whitehall and St James's (Buckingham wasn't built yet). So the effect on the government & ruling class would have been devastating.
On the other hand, the main commercial, shipping and population centre of London at the time was the City of London, which is a couple of miles from Parliament (technically in the City of Westminster), so the direct effect on London's population would have been small. The knock-on might have been huge, though. Just as 9/11 may have ended lower manhattan's dominance of the finance sector in NYC, it's possible that London's importance as a trading centre would have been seriously dented.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yep: massacre of anyone sharing the same religion as Guy Fawkes, leading to two-sided clash of faiths that would rapidly have drawn in other countries and had an impact far beyond the initial location of the event.
Just like 9/11 in fact.
Ade_
/
Re:Umm.. (Score:2, Interesting)
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=U
Guy Fawkes on shwi (Score:2)
Re:Umm.. (Score:3, Funny)
that is a stupid question
What if RMS was sane?
that is a much more sensible question, but asked in a profoundly stupid way
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
- View 1: "Things" are primarily formed by important events, individuals, accidents of nature.
- View 2: "Things" are primarily predestined by forces of geography, sociology, psychology, etc. Events, even on the scale of London blowing up, are insignificant overall. They may delay things and alter them in minor ways, but the trend will be as before.
Re:Mod up the coward!!! (Score:2)
1. Is there a more Welsh name than Geraint Thomas? Answers on a postcard, please.
2. What kind of a department is the Centre for Explosion Studies? Can you get degrees in that? Sounds like a fun course.
Answers (Score:2)
2. A really cool place to work
Re:Sorry for being American but... (Score:4, Funny)
Technically we are celebrating the failure of a plot to bring down the government (King+Parliament) by means of an explosive nature.
As quoted from my wife's website (Score:5, Interesting)
The rest of the article is here:
www.bonfirenight.net/gunpowder.php [bonfirenight.net]
She was interviewed about Bonfire Night by the Assoc. French Press:
http://tinyurl.com/tnu3 (Yahoo News)
(My wife is a bigger geek than I...Yay!)