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And the International Air Transport Association accused European governments of offering "no risk assessment, no consultation, no coordination, and no leadership," urging a quicker reopening of European skies. Engineers worry about immediate catastrophic damage when the ash dust congeals in an engine turbine, blocking air flow and shutting it down, Fabian said. In 1989, when a Boeing 747 flew through volcanic ash over Alaska, all four engines failed and the plane dropped more than two miles in five minutes, before engines restarted. Ash can also cause long-term abrasive damage to planes that could lead to later disasters if not dealt with. Fabian said the reason engineers know so little about the risks from volcanic ash is that it would take many hours and great expense to do repeated tests. And tests would be needed for the 20 different types of engines currently flown. And even if engineers knew how much ash a plane's engines could handle, atmospheric scientists can't say how much ash is in any one place or predict what will happen next, said Jon Davidson, a professor of earth sciences at Durham University in England. The ash becomes more diluted as it goes higher in altitude but also clumps together at times like sediments in a river, he said. "We have built a society that's fairly sensitive to natural changes," Davidson said. "An eruption like this 100 years ago wouldn't have caused any issues in Europe. Possibly we'd not even know about it." But the more technology and the faster the speed of travel, the more types of risks we are forced to accept, Fischbeck said. "You can get hurt only so bad walking; you add a horse and you can hurt more," Fischbeck said. At the same time, with improved technology "you see an evolution of the risks, not necessarily an increase of risks," he said. Flying is a good example. In the 1950s, there were far more plane accidents than there are now. That's good because people are less willing to accept low levels of risk, Fischbeck said. "We set our thresholds so that things that would have been trivial risks in the past would be front page stories now," Fischbeck said. "We demand a much higher level of safety than we did in the past." So would the risk and engine experts fly through the volcanic plume? "Imagine being on the first flight out of Heathrow, my stomach would be turning," Gray said. Fischbeck, a former pilot, and Fabian, an airline engine expert, said they rely on the pilot's judgment. "To me if the pilot is willing to risk his own life, I'll go," Fabian said.
[Associated
Press;
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