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- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban
- Path: sparky!uunet!psinntp!cmcl2!panix!dannyb
- From: dannyb@panix.com (Daniel Burstein)
- Subject: zebras - why are they striped?
- Message-ID: <1993Jan2.082223.29317@panix.com>
- Date: Sat, 2 Jan 1993 08:22:23 GMT
- Organization: Panix, NYC
- Lines: 27
-
- someone asked what was the advantage to zebras of being striped. The
- answer seems to be cameflouge (sp?)
-
- Surprisingly, the striping, which on first thought would make them easier
- to see and target, actually makes them much more difficult to find.
-
- The television series, NOVA, produced an excellant show (well, most of
- them are <g>) called something like "The deception of cameflouge" which
- went into the use of same by teh military to hide items. (Also, it turns
- out, there are times you WANT to make items more visible...)
-
- Anyway, one of the things they demonstrated was the use of the
- "Razzle-Dazzle" painting schemes used by ships at teh end of the Great War
- (also known as WW 1). To the vast amazement of eveyone involved (except
- the proponenets of the scheme), painting ships with large more or less
- randomized splotches of black and white actually made them HARDER to locate.
-
- If you can catch any real WWI or WWII film footage, keep an eye out for
- these ships. The technique kind of faded (no pun inteneded) towards the
- end of WW II when radar and infrared began to replace the "mark-one eyeball"
-
- The NOVA episode is available on video, and has lots of greatstuff in it,
- including the use of inflatable tanks! and painting shadows on runways so
- enemy pilots shoot the wrong targets...
-
- dannyb@panix.com
-
-