Answer to Qs re radar and health
Just got back from my boat and saw the questions to me. Since this is a sailing group, I’ll limit my response on electromagnetic field exposure (emf) to only this message; and I’ll keep it short.Emf is not a foreign substance, a toxin, like arsenic; it is fundamental to life. Nerve function, protein folding, etc all involve emf. Thus, a biologist would expect a biological interaction if the “tuning” is right, eg frequency, modulation, etc. There is, in fact, a large well established literature showing that living organisms from bacteria to mammals use emf in sensory function. Thus, a reasonable question is whether some of the artificial fields from radars, cell phones, etc have the “tuning “ characteristics to interfere with normal use of emf by living organisms and could be a hazard.The research to determine the full answer has not been allowed to proceed in the normal fashion in biology because of the well-documented actions of some vested interests. The U of Michigan’s Institute for Values and Science, headed up by Prof. Nicholas Steneck, an ethicist, did a comprehensive study of this area of research and documented this fact: see Steneck’s book “The microwave debate” and also the chapters by Steneck, Frey and also Medici in Steneck’s other book “Risk/benefit analysis: the microwave case”.There is a lot of extraneous misleading literature that has been published, as happened in the tobacco situation. But there is also a good bit of good work that has been published whose overall pattern indicates that there could be hazard under some circumstances. You might look, for example, at chapter 2 of my book: An integration of the data on mechanisms with particular reference to cancer. Thus I would generally put a pole mounted radar on standby if someone went up to the foredeck. Allan