Katrina was a generational storm,
and to me a generational storm means that if you are of a certain generation,
you can name exactly where you were and what you were doing during Katrina.
The annual global gathering of Earth scientists, the H.E.U.
Fall meeting, is not just a chance for them to share their latest discoveries,
it's also a chance to relearn lessons from past events, like the disaster of Hurricane Katrina.
That's what I was doing during the day, at night.
As Katrina was making its approach, I was reading John McPhee's Control of Nature,
a book that was written in what, 1985, that described exactly what would happen to New Orleans.
They got hit by a category three.
Katrina hit in 2005.
My urgent question is the social science question of what does it take for us to take something that we know is going to happen?
This was a pack session at last month's AGU meeting not just
because it was the 20th anniversary of the storm but
because the conference was being held in New Orleans,
the city on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico that caught the brunt of the hurricane,
with a loss of 1,300 lives and a cost of $125 billion.
I'm Ron Appes, and for this second edition of BBC Discovery,
from the massive 2025 American Cheer Physical Union meeting,
I'll be heading back to the beginning of life,