HOW HAS THE WEATHER AFFECTED HISTORY?

          Throughout history, the weather has had a major influence on the outcome of certain events. Adverse weather conditions have helped decide the outcome of battles and military campaigns, while over longer periods of time, climate change is thought to have brought about the end of some civilizations and the beginning of others.

          While searching for some topic of interest to bumble on about in this blog, I remembered an article I read ages ago that left an impression. Maybe the weather is something that most of us at CSAG think about on a daily basis (I hope), but it is interesting to hear how the weather has helped shaped history – and thus the societal world we live in.  As will be discussed shortly, the weather can be a huge deciding point in what happens when, and it is interesting to hear about events that may or may not have happened because of weather conditions (and I’m not talking about a picnic at Kirstenbosch event).

          On the 6th August 1945 it was a fine summer day in Hiroshima. At 7:09am a weather reconnaissance plane passed overhead and radioed back: “Cloud cover less than three-tenths. Advice: bomb primary.” Thus, the sky was clear enough to drop the first nuclear weapon used in war. The lack of cloud cover sealed Hiroshima’s fate, and spared the back-up target. Even more dramatic was the effect of cloud cover on Kokura. On the 8th August 1945, the second nuclear weapon was loaded into a B-29, however the skies were overcast over the primary target, Kokura. Instead, the bomb was released over the backup target: Nagasaki.

          In the 13th century, Kublai Khan, leader of the Mongol Empire, set his sights on the conquest of Japan, but was defeated by not one, but two monsoons. Shinto priests, who believed the storms were the result of prayer, called them kamikaze or “divine wind.”

Picture Credit : Google