Franklin Fact Archive
January, 2000
February, 2000
March, 2000
April, 2000
May, 2000
June, 2000
July, 2000
August, 2000
September, 2000
October, 2000
November, 2000
December, 2000
January, 2001
February, 2001
March, 2001
April, 2001
May, 2001
June, 2001
July, 2001
August, 2001
September, 2001
October, 2001
November, 2001
December, 2001
Back to Franklin Facts homepage.
Back to TV12
|
WEDNESDAY DECEMBER 5 - RAINMAKING, PART III
Last night I related the story of
Charles Hatfield, who achieved fame in the
early 20th century as a rainmaker. Even at that time, scientists knew that
Hatfield's methods didn't enhance the rain - his claimed successes relied
mainly on good showmanship, a gullible audience, and remarkable coincidence.
But at that time, public relations, not science, carried the day. Years later,
Burt Lancaster played a
character resembling Charles Hatfield in the 1956 movie
"The Rainmaker," based on a play of the same name.
Today, the manipulation of rain clouds that Charles Hatfield claimed eludes even
the most advanced scientists in the field of weather modification. Modern
researchers do "seed" clouds with various small solid particles that, in principle,
can act as nuclei for clouds to grow. However, experimental tests have
not yet shown that these methods actually increase rainfall. Today, cloud
seeding remains a promising, yet unproven, area of active research.
|