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These days if you want to simulate something in the physical world
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you use a computer.
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But what if you couldn't?
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What if it was, say, the 1950s
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and you needed to work out if a bold but questionable plan
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to dam the San Francisco Bay was a good idea?
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The answer is this: The US Army Corps of Engineers Bay Model.
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The Bay Model is one and a half acres or more.
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What you're looking at is one of our former scientific, hydrodynamic,
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engineering testing facilities.
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And this was the tool, the instrument, that they used to see
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what the unforeseen consequences of the John Reber Plan was going to be.
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In the 1940s and 50s a man named John Reber
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had a plan to completely change the San Francisco Bay.
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Enormous dams would create freshwater lakes.
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There'd be brand-new reclaimed land for industry and for air and naval bases.
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Reber said it would make the bay a defensible military fortification,
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move people safely inland
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and the newly dammed rivers would provide huge amounts of drinking water.
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Reber was not a professional engineer.
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He was a theatrical producer who had done a lot of research,
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but because he worked in showbiz, he knew how to promote something.
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And by most accounts he was a friendly, sincere, convincing man.
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So unlike other ideas for giant engineering projects, the Reber Plan actually caught on.
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Debate went back and forth for years but eventually
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Reber's plan seemed realistic enough, at least to politicians,
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that the US Army Corps of Engineers were tasked to see if it was practical
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and they were given $2.5m, that's about $25m today, to find out.
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And with it, they built this.
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This model when it was built was the next level, the next generation.
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It was extremely accurate as an instrument.
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At the time there really wasn't anything better.
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There's 250,000 strategically placed little copper tabs in the bottom of the model
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to keep the saltwater and the freshwater from going in and out too quickly,
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but also to duplicate any little protrusions sticking up out of the bottom of the bay.
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The model is 1:1000 scale horizontally,
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1:100 scale vertically and 1:100 scale in time.
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That means about two hundred times a day,
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the tide comes in and the tide goes out,
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because San Francisco Bay has tides and therefore, so does the model.
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Everything was hand operated for the first thirty years.
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It took probably anywhere between twelve and fifteen people to operate it,
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sometimes it was as many as sixty people here at one time
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working on various different experiments
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and everybody had to be totally in sync.
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It was like an orchestra.
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And the interns were out there in chairs, in lab coats, in the water
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measuring the various different ebb and flow of the tide.
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It took three years for Reber's plan to be tested here
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and in that time Reber passed away.
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And for his supporters, the results from the model were devastating.
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It looked great on paper, convinced a lot of people,
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but when it was tested they found that it was only good on paper.
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The end result was it failed on ninety-nine different accounts.
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Wild and unpredictable catastrophic flooding was just one of them.
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The dams wouldn't create lakes, they'd create evaporation ponds.
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The tide would create dangerous currents and waves.
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In short, not only would the Reber Plan have been a disaster,
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it would have been a billion dollar disaster.
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The ecosystem would have been devastated too,
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but it was the 50s, so no-one was really thinking about that.
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The Corps of Engineers, their job done,
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figured the model would come in useful again someday.
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And it did,
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helping to test smaller and more practical schemes across the bay for decades.
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These days, of course, computers can do all of that
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for a fraction of the time and the money,
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but it's still a good educational resource.
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Last time I talked about a grand civil engineering scheme like this,
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about Herman Sörgel's Atlantropa,
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I said it was a testament to how big we can dream,
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but this model is a testament to something else.
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To science.
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To having a hypothesis.
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To testing it.
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And then, when it fails, admitting that it's wrong.
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There shouldn't be any shame in that.
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Sometimes we follow bad ideas,
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and changing your mind based on new evidence
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and allowing others to do the same
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is something our world should be built on,
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and it's exactly what this model made happen.