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Can an average person develop the skill to reliably detect liars?

To clarify:  this question is similar to - Can an average person improve at hiding and detecting 'tells' in poker?  Also, consider only deliberate lies intended to harm another and, please, expound on the reasons backing your answer.

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Interacting with nature by K:

How to Offer Wild Birds Shelter in the Winter

Not all birds migrate south for the winter.  Winter is a hard season for birds, and many risk freezing to death at night. It doesn't take much effort or money to provide shelter for them, and it can make a huge difference to the little feathered guys!

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Lightning on Mt Everest?

Mt. Everest photoQ: Does lightning strike the top of Mt. Everest?

[mnteverest.net, ©1999, used with permission] Mount Everest, elevation: 29,055 feet (8850 meters), the highest mountain on Earth.

A: "Your reader asks a very insightful, excellent question," says Hugh Christian, Chief Scientist for NASA's satellite lightning detection system, which covers Earth. (My reader, Teddy, is ten years old.)

Many of us have seen lightning strike the mountaintop above. We huddle under a tarp in the driving rain and watch from a ridge below. That's close enough. Sure, lightning strikes mountain tops, but does it strike tall mountains--Mount Everest, up 29,035 feet in the sky?

Thunderstorms grow above 60,000 feet and observers have seen lightning coming out of their tops, says Christian. That's twice as high as Everest, so elevation is not a problem. The mountain, however, is.

NASA's detection system does record significant lightning in the Tibet plateau, up to about 7,000 feet. But none along the high Tibetan mountains. Mount Everest doesn't get hit by lightning or, at least, the satellites haven't seen any.

Christian speculates tall mountains change the whole development of clouds and suspects the clouds rain out as they go up the mountain. He'd also like Teddy to participate and investigate these phenomena.

Further Surfing:

mnteverest.net

Learning from Lightning, About the lightning detection system, Science@NASA

Understanding lightning, USATODAY.com Weather  

(Answered February 21, 2001)

 

 

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