Distillations | Science History Institute

Acts of God, Acts of Men: When We Turn Nature into a Weapon

May 26, 2015
Anna Stitt, a field reporter covering Oklahoma’s surge in human-linked quakes, speaks with residents about damaged homes and daily fear. Jacob Darwin Hamblin, historian of Cold War environmental thought, discusses militarized plans to weaponize nature and how that shaped ecological science. They examine induced earthquakes, disposal wells, and historic military strategies that reframed human impacts on the environment.
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ANECDOTE

Resident Without Mineral Rights Bears The Cost

  • Sharon McDonald can’t afford repairs; earthquake damage raised her heating costs and left structural cracks across her property.
  • She lacks mineral rights, so companies drill beneath her land while disposal wells sit nearby without local community compensation.
ANECDOTE

Health Fears Compound Earthquake Trauma

  • Sharon suspects water contamination after cancers affected her and neighbors, but she lacks definitive proof linking illnesses to drilling.
  • The fear of living with potential toxins compounds trauma over losing a safe home and access to clean water.
INSIGHT

State Acknowledgment With Limited Action

  • Oklahoma officially acknowledged in 2015 that oil and gas activities cause many recent quakes but passed legislation blocking local restrictions on production.
  • State response focused on moving disposal wells deeper rather than halting drilling or compensating affected residents.
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