Hypothermia: Extreme Weather Hunting
Hypothermia occurs when your body loses heat faster than it can produce it, causing your core body temperature to fall. Hypothermia is often induced by cold, wet conditions, such as rain, snow, sleet, or immersion in water. However, hypothermia can occur at temperatures as high as 50° Fahrenheit. Moisture from perspiration, humidity, and dew or rain on bushes and trees also can soak your clothing over time, putting you at risk in cold weather. Wet or damp clothes will draw heat out of your body more rapidly than cold air. Wind lowers your body temperature as it evaporates moisture from your body. Resting against cold surfaces also will draw heat from your body (Michigan Hunter Safety Course).
Michigan hunter safety course. (2011, February 08). Retrieved from http://www.hunter-ed.com/mi/course/ch8_coping_with_extreme_weather.htm
Labels: Taylor Kennedy
1 Comments:
Great information included in your research, most people are unaware that hypothermia can occur at just 50 degrees F. You would assume it would need to be much colder than that to induce hypothermia, but in fact it does not need to be especially when factoring in other elements.
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