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<br />620 WEATHER MODIFICATION <br /> <br />ing experiment named Precipitation Enhance- <br />ment Project (PEP), but this plan was dropped <br />as conditions did not appear particularly favor- <br />able. <br />From the earliest days of weather modifica- <br />tion, some writers have pointed to its potential <br />military applications. Although time has dis- <br />pelled many of the original fanciful notions of <br />weather warfare, the possibility of one nation <br />producing detrimental effects in another still ex- <br />ists. In 1974 the United Nations passed a resolu- <br />tion, which has been adopted by many member <br />counties, renouncing the use of weather modifi- <br />cation and other forms of geophysical warfare. <br /> <br />BIBLIOGRAPHY <br /> <br />Dennis A. S. (1980). "Weather Modification by Cloud <br />Seeding." Academic Press, New York. <br />Foote, G. B., and Knight, C. A. eds. (1977). "Hail: A <br />Review of Hail Science and Hail Suppression." <br />Meteor. Monog., Vol. 16, No. 38, American Me- <br />teorological Society, Boston. <br />Hess, W. N., ed., (1974). "Weather and Climate Mod- <br />ification." Wiley, New York. <br />World Meteorological Organization, (1980). Papers <br />presented at the WMO Scient. Con! Weather <br />Modification, 3rd, Clermont-Ferrand, 1980. <br />World Meteorological Organization, Geneva, <br />Switzerland. <br /> <br />~ <br /> <br />oj <br />