The Economist June 11th 2022 Science & technology 79
Floodwarnings
Earthshaking
O
njuly14th 2021 a floodtorethrough
theAhrvalley,innorthwestGermany.
Noneofthetownsuponwhichitvisited
deathanddestructionhadhadwarningof
howbaditwouldbe.Thatwarningshould
havebeen supplied byautomatic flood
levelgaugessitedupstream,intheriverit
self.Itwouldhavepermittedevacuationof
housesinparticulardanger.Butthegauges
weredestroyedbythetorrentbeforethey
couldsupplymeaningfulinformation.
Relyingoninstrumentswhichare,by
their very location, vulnerable to being
swept away, is hardly an ideal approach to
tracking impending floods. But Michael
Dietze of gfz, the German Research Centre
for Geosciences, suggests an alternative.
On May 26th he proposed to the annual
meeting of the European Geosciences Un
ion, in Vienna, that a network of seismom
eters of a sort more usually employed to re
cord earthquakes might do the job.
Seismometers record minute ground
movements. Their purpose is to listen for
vibrations generated by tectonic activity,
usually far away. But on that particular day
a rather different set of useful signals came
to a seismometer operated by Germany’s
Central Seismological Observatory. This
was, fortuitously, located 1km north of the
Ahr’s streambed. And it picked up vibra
tions caused by the passing deluge.
They were not completely unexpected.
Research by Dr Dietze and others had alrea
dy established that seismometers several
kilometres from fast mountain rivers can
detect the violence with which the waters
of a swollen stream pound the banks, and
also the din of millions of pebbles, boul
ders and other debris bouncing along the
bottom during a flood. However, when
they studied this particular seismometer’s
output, he and his colleagues also saw a
third, more gradual effect: a tilting of the
ground on which the instrument was rest
ing. This was caused by deformation of the
local crustal rocks as a result of the sheer
weight of the bulge of water speeding
through the valley. They had seen some
thing similar before, but only as a conse
quence of typhoons hitting small islands.
Together, says Dr Dietze, these three sig
nals provided a wealth of information, al
beit retrospective, about the flood’s behav
iour from the moment it came within lis
tening range, about 2km upstream, until it
had passed the point closest to the seis
mometer, after which grid power failed
andthemeasurementsstopped. Both the
tilting and the vibrations revealed the
flood’s direction; the debris noise gave an
indication of how much damage to river
banks and buildings the passing surge
might inflict; and variations in the ampli
tude of the seismic waves, as the amount of
attenuating rock between source and the
seismometer changed, made it possible to
estimate the speed with which the water
mass was travelling downriver.
That is 20:20 hindsight, for no means of
processing the relevant data were in place
at the time. But Dr Dietze reckons a pur
posebuilt system, using three seismo
graphic stations out of reach of the raging
waters, could have done this and more—
for having several scattered instruments
would also allow a flood’s front to be locat
ed and tracked. It would permit, too, a fair
assessment of the amount of water in the
bulge behind that front to be calculated.
If this multiinstrument arrangement
had been in place last July it could have giv
en the town worst affected, Bad Neuenahr
Ahrweiler (pictured), 3045 minutes of no
tice before the flood arrived, and also an es
timate of its peak level. At about €3,000 per
instrument, this would probably be a good
investment for the future in the Ahr valley,
and is also worth considering elsewhere.
Dr Dietze estimates that 20% of Eu
rope’s surface consists of the kind of up
land terrain which abounds with confined,
floodprone valleys like that of the Ahr.
About half of this (mostly in the Alps) is al
ready well served by floodwarning sys
tems. But much of the rest is hardly moni
tored at all. Scattering a few cheap seis
mometers around theseneglected regions
might make all the differencenext time the
local weather misbehaves.n
A better way to warn of flash floods
Forewarned is forearmed
M
usicisgoodforthehealth.And
drumming may be best of all. As
well as being physically demanding, it
requires people to synchronise their
limbs and to react to outside stimuli,
such as what the rest of the band is up to.
It is particularly helpful for children
who have emotional and behavioural
difficulties. Researchers at the Clem
Burke Drumming Project—an organisa
tion named after Blondie’s drummer,
who was one of its founders—have
shown that teaching such children to
drum helps them to control their re
actions more generally, to focus more
effectively on tasks they are given, and to
communicate better with other people.
The project’s latest work, published in
the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciencesby a team led by MarieStéphanie
Cahart of King’s College, London, goes a
step further. It looks at the neurological
changes which accompany these shifts.
Ms Cahart and her colleagues recruit
ed 36 autistic teenagers and split them
into two groups. One lot had drum les
sons twice a week for eight weeks. The
othersdidnot.Atthebeginningandend
of the project everyone was asked to stay
still for 45 minutes in a functional mag
neticresonance imaging (fmri) mach
ine, to see how the activity of their brains
had changed. Their behaviour, as report
ed by their guardians, was also recorded.
As expected, most of the drumming
group showed positive behavioural
changes. And these were indeed reflected
in their brains. The fmriscans showed
that several clusters of connectivity
between parts of those brains had
strengthened during the experiment. In
particular, two regions involved in atten
tion control, the right dorsolateral pre
frontal cortex and the right inferior
frontal gyrus, formed strong links, re
spectively, with places associated with
introspection and with areas involved in
deciphering facial expressions.
These changes in the brain’s “wet
ware” thus nicely match the changes in
behaviour which learning to drum in
duces. Not a surprise, perhaps. But a
gratifying confirmation of drumming’s
power to heal.
Musictherapy
A drum, a drum, Clem Burke doth come
Learning drumming can help teenagers with behavioural problems