EXPLOSIVES SAFETY MANUAL - AFM 127-100I - CHANGE
Authors not listed · 1968
Military explosive safety protocols recognized electromagnetic interference risks decades before consumer EMF health concerns emerged.
Plain English Summary
This 1968 Air Force explosives safety manual established technical protocols for handling dangerous materials including chemical and biological agents. While not directly EMF-focused, military safety documents from this era often addressed electromagnetic compatibility issues that could trigger explosive devices. The manual represents early institutional awareness of electromagnetic interference risks in sensitive environments.
Why This Matters
This military safety manual from 1968 provides important historical context for understanding how electromagnetic interference concerns evolved in high-stakes environments. The reality is that explosive ordnance has long been vulnerable to stray electromagnetic signals - a fact that military organizations recognized decades before consumer EMF health effects gained attention. What this means for you is that if electromagnetic fields were powerful enough to accidentally detonate military explosives, the same physics principles apply to biological systems, though at different thresholds. The science demonstrates that electromagnetic compatibility has been a serious technical concern in critical applications for over half a century, lending credibility to modern concerns about EMF effects on sensitive biological processes.
Exposure Information
Specific exposure levels were not quantified in this study.
Show BibTeX
@article{explosives_safety_manual_afm_127_100i_change_g4775,
author = {Unknown},
title = {EXPLOSIVES SAFETY MANUAL - AFM 127-100I - CHANGE},
year = {1968},
}