Do you suppose that one could survive the period of fall out after a nuclear blast, in the subway?

I mean, some of those tunnels in NYC are like many many stories below ground.

This is also assuming the initial blast wasnt directly in the city, so fallen buildings and fire storms arent a major concern.

Would you be protected from the radiation and fall out. nevermind food or water.

Its not a creepy question, iam writing a book and can only do so much on google. Sometimes its just nice to hear what others think is plausible.

Answer:
You'd drown, in NYC anyway. The subways are continually pumped out. If the infrastructure were destroyed, the tunnels would fill up with water within a day or two.

In a non-island location, the fallout would presumably get in via water seepage. You'd be awfully thirsty in there, and once the water in the pipes was gone, you might give in. Plus, I don't know how much would blow in from outside. That would depend a lot on details of the tunnel.
maybe
Well, here in the SF Bay Area we would be able to down in the tunnels that go below the bay for sure. That's a good plan - that's straight where I'm headed come nuclear holocaust.
could you survive in the subway without a nuclear blast? it's so polluted now...
Depends how far you are from "Ground Zero" but all-in-all, no since radiation can penetrate pretty far down...again, depending on how far you are from the initial blast zone.
you would probably have to surface before all the fallout had come down due to food and drink needs.

read a book called RATS Domain by James Herbert, its about a nuclear attack on London and people living in bunkers in the underground system.

good luck
Theoretically yes you could survive there in the event of the blast but as I understand within a day or so you would want to start finding a way to get out and away from fallout as the ground will saturate with radioactivity and eventually get to you. I believe that you can even survive a blast or a meltdown if you sit in your basement against the wall that is facing the blast, however you only have a couple hours and taking iodine pills would also be recommended.
Depends on the yield
Yes, gamma radiation is effectively blocked by only a few feet of soil. That radiation is deadly and short lived. We built fallout shelters back in the 50's to survive. We never got to try them out but they were all government approved. But I always wondered what would happen when you came out. Things would be a mess I bet. Good luck.
If you survive the blast and heat shock, you will probably be fine, at least for several years. People survived both Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and they were not even in subway tunnels.
No
beside today it would not be like Hiroshima
in the first place the new boms are thousand times stronger

and in the second place there would not be just one
others would follow in retaliation,

the sun would be blocked out for maybe years ,and you would freeze to death ,if you survived the breathing

the only chance you would have is in the specially build sealed Subteranean cities ,which produce their own air and heat as well as having food stocks.

Only problem is that they are reserved for the ruling elites ,
and normal mortals have to demonstrate their mortality outside
You would succumb sooner or later. You would wish it was sooner.

Read up on Hiroshima survivors, that will give you the background you need.

The answers post by the user, for information only, FunQA.com does not guarantee the right.



More Questions and Answers:
  • Why are we so concerned about global warming and forgetting what corportate pollution is doing to our health?
  • Where can i sell plastic bottles for cash in philadelphia?
  • Is it true that Freecycle is making money from it's members giving items away and the founder gets $45k annum
  • Global warming?
  • Where does "global climate change" rank for you, amongst the issues for the next election?
  • Why Can't Industrial Coutries Reduce Their Carbon Emission & Stop Blaming Developing Countries?
  • Is it true that leaving in a phone charger or any other appliance uses energy? even when its not in use??
  • Climate Change Questions?
  • Even after this live earth concert, none of the young folks here know about solar?