Mark Boslough | |
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![]() Mark Boslough CSICon at 2018 Climate Literacy Workshop | |
Born | |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | California Institute of Technology Colorado State University |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Physics Geophysics Planetary Defense |
Institutions | Los Alamos National Laboratory University of New Mexico Sandia National Laboratories |
Doctoral advisor | Thomas J. Ahrens |
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Website | www |
Mark Boslough is an American physicist atLos Alamos National Laboratory, research professor atUniversity of New Mexico,fellow of theCommittee for Skeptical Inquiry,[1] and chair of theAsteroid Day Expert Panel. He is an expert in the study ofplanetary impacts and globalcatastrophes. Due to his work in this field,Asteroid 73520 Boslough (2003 MB1) was named in his honor.[2]
Boslough grew up inBroomfield, Colorado. He holds a B.S. inphysics atColorado State University, and an MS and PhD inapplied physics at theCalifornia Institute of Technology.
An expert on planetary impacts and global catastrophes, Boslough's work on airbursts challenged the conventional view ofasteroid collision risk and is now widely accepted by the scientific community.[3] He was the first scientist to suggest that the Libyan Desert Glass was formed by melting due to overhead heating from an airburst.[4] His hypothesis was popularized by the documentaries "Tutunkhamun's Fireball" (BBC),[5][6] (recipient ofDiscover Magazine's Top 100 Science Stories of 2006)[7] andNational Geographic's "Ancient Asteroid".[8] Footage from the documentaries has been used to describe the controversial notion that a large airburst over North America caused anabrupt climate change mass extinction.[9] However, Boslough has been a leading critic of theYounger Dryas impact hypothesis, arguing among other things that the proponents have misinterpreted his airburst models.[10] He appeared as a skeptic on the "Last Extinction"Nova,[11] (recipient of AAAS Kavli award for best science documentary of 2009).[12]
In 2011, he presented a paper at the IAA Planetary Defense Conference inBucharest,Romania, in which he stated, "It is virtually certain (probability > 99%) that the next destructive NEO event will be an airburst."[13] This prediction proved true less than two years later, on Feb. 15, 2013, when an airburst over Chelyabinsk, Russia injured more than 1000 people. Boslough was among the first western scientists to arrive inChelyabinsk, where he did field research and accompanied a production crew filming Meteor Strike forNova.[14] Most of the documentaries are focused on his impact and airburst modeling.[15]
In February 2011, it was announced that Boslough had been elected afellow of theCommittee for Skeptical Inquiry.[1]
In 2014, Boslough delivered a major address on "death plunge" asteroids that can pose a sudden danger to Earth at the secondStarmus Festival in theCanary Islands. Also in 2014 he talks about his interest in asteroids to Toni Feder of Physics Today: "In his childhood home in Colorado, says Boslough, "there was a left-brain right-brain thing going on, with fiction and nonfiction in the same household."[16]
In recognition of Boslough's work in the field ofplanetary impacts and globalcatastrophes, Asteroid 73520 Boslough (2003 MB1) was named in his honor.[2]
Boslough is a vocal critic ofpseudoscience andanti-science and has written aboutclimate change denial in theSkeptical Inquirer in reference to "Climategate" conspiracy theories.[17] He is also active in uncovering scientific misconduct.[18][19][20]
An advocate of using humor to defend science,[21] he once published an essay as anApril Fool's Day joke in the April, 1998 issue of theNew Mexicans for Science and Reason newsletter to poke fun atNew Mexico's legislature for attempting to require schools to teach creationism. He wrote that theAlabama state legislature had voted to change the value of the mathematical constantpi from 3.14159 to the 'Biblical value' of 3.0. The article was posted on a newsgroup and passed around to people via email, causing an outrage. When people started calling the Alabama legislature to protest, the joke was revealed.[22]National Geographic News highlighted Boslough's story when it compiled a list of "some of the more memorable hoaxes in recent history."[23] It was elevated by theMuseum of Hoaxes to number seven on its "Top 100 April Fools Hoaxes of All Time" list.[24] It eventually took on a new existence as an urban legend and has had to be debunked bySnopes.[25]
He also demonstrated that emailed lists of "Darwin Awards" include fake stories. After receiving an annual list of unfortunate deaths at the end of 1998, he fabricated his own over-the-top fictional Darwin Award recipient, appended it, and forwarded the list to his friends. That story also went viral, was printed as an actual event by theDenver Post, leading to another debunking by Snopes.[26]
In a tweet on March 13, 2018, Boslough announced he was acandidate for theNew Mexico House of Representatives, challenging theincumbent William Rehm.[27][28] Boslough lost the primary election to the incumbent william Rehm, 1,509 to 288 (84% to 16%).[29]
Boslough is an advocate of laws to reform the 19th-century law known asRS 2477 to prevent it from being used to take private property for public use.[30] His fight turned into a prolonged battle with off-road clubs pulling out boulders and seedlings that Boslough used to try and restore his property.[31] He also received verbal and physical threats before he successfully defended a lawsuit (Ramey v. Boslough) in which the ownership of a four-wheel-drive road across his Colorado property was challenged by a plaintiff who was backed by off-road recreation interests.[32] He used this experience to argue that the "right to radiate" is a prescriptive private property right, and that carbon polluters must compensate individuals for degrading their personal cooling capacity.[33]