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SWJED
02-18-2007, 02:07 PM
Bees in a Box Buzz Bombs (http://rapidrecon.threatswatch.org/2007/02/bees-in-a-box-buzz-bombs/) - Threats Watch.


About a decade ago, scientists at a national laboratory, in partnership with the University of Montana, were working on a project to “re-train” bees to respond to the chemical signature of chemical and biological weapons. These were the days between the first War in the Persian Gulf and our current battles against terrorism. The concept was to replace the bees’ reactions to pheromones and have them instead, “make a bee line” to the chemical or biological weapons. Suspecting that Hussein had his chemical and biological weapons in underground bunkers to avoid detection by inspectors, the idea was to send a swarm of specially trained bees to locate the sites.

In an outgrowth of this earlier research University of Montana researchers demonstrated the use of insects to detect pollution and land mines . A related program, funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), demonstrated that bees were trained in less than two hours using sugar-water rewards to condition a hive of honeybees to eschew flowers and instead hunt for 2,4-dinitrotoluene, or DNT, a residue in TNT and other explosives, in concentrations as tiny as a few thousandths of a part per trillion...

Stan
02-18-2007, 09:49 PM
http://maic.jmu.edu/journal/7.3/focus/bromenshenk/bromenshenk.htm

Issue 7.3, December 2003


Honey bees have recently received considerable attention from the popular press as an innovative method to detect a variety of explosives, landmines and UXO. Many of these reports are inaccurate and may encourage individuals and demining groups to “sell” a service that they poorly understand or lack the experience to properly apply. As the developers of this technology, we offer the following summary about the current status of this alternative for landmine detection, including its strengths and limitations.

by Jerry J. Bromenshenk, Colin B. Henderson, Robert A. Seccomb, Steven D. Rice and Robert T. Etter, Bee Alert Technology, Inc. and UM; Susan F.A. Bender and Philip J. Rodacy, SNL; Joseph A. Shaw, Nathan L. Seldomridge and Lee H. Spangler, MSU; and James J. Wilson, NOAA


Results of Ft. Leonard Wood Bee Trials

All of the data forms (LIDAR, video, visual counts) indicate that area reduction, identification, and ranking (strength of the plume source) could be determined using bees. The following are some results of the trials:

1. LIDAR was able to detect individual bees at long ranges of hundreds of meters. Fixed and scan modes were tested and proved capable of providing bee location and range data within a few centimeters’ resolution.
2. Video and visual counts showed that bees found both individual mines and clusters of mines within the test area.
3. Preliminary chemical analyses results indicate that numbers of bees correlate with plume concentrations. Ten of 12 vapor sources identified by the initial chemical analysis have already been detected by a partial data set of bee counts (based on only four days of the data). The contour maps of the landmine field, based on the visual and partial video counts of bees and on the cumulative results of three different chemical sampling methods illustrate the degree of localization that was achieved.
4. In the designated, unmined, blank or control area, the LIDAR detected a concentration of bees over a spot in front of the minefield. When that spot was later sampled, it was found to be contaminated with TNT, 2.4-DNT and 4-amino DNT.
5. The pressurized conditioning system worked flawlessly, and Missouri bees conditioned as readily as any of the bees that we have previously worked with in Montana and Texas.

The bees also made a surprise detection of a contaminated site where none was expected. This example proves the importance of combining a high-resolution tracking system such as LIDAR with properly conditioned bees as a system for detecting explosives or residues.

120mm
02-19-2007, 07:29 AM
God, I hate Johnny-come-lately's

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Pigeon

I introduce to you, B.F. Skinner's "Pigeon-guided missiles" from WWII.

Stan
02-19-2007, 07:42 AM
Thanks 120 !
Did Skinner buy more pigeons with his cash ? I gotta wonder, were the 3 pigeons guiding the missile "in flight missile repairmen", or, were they released when the missile achieved "creep" :eek:


Although skeptical of the idea, the National Defense Research Committee nevertheless contributed $25,000 to the research. However, Skinner's plans to use pigeons in Pelican missiles was apparently too radical for the military establishment; although he had some success with the training, he could not get his idea taken seriously.


God, I hate Johnny-come-lately's

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Pigeon

I introduce to you, B.F. Skinner's "Pigeon-guided missiles" from WWII.