On Tuesday, 30 November 2021 at 7:37:47 am UTC+11, Duke wrote:
I have now located the Arctic's Winter Island! So I'm thinking this clue has two definitions plus wordplay
(a) Spend December to February; (b) an island in the Arctic Ocean; (c) anagram ("explosion") of "write" about "n," abbreviating "nuclear." Yes?
From Steve:
Spend December to February on an island in the Arctic Ocean and write about nuclear explosion (6)
Help, please. I see "Spend December to February" as a definition. I see "write about + nuclear" giving me WINTER, although (a) I'm not sure "n" really abbreviates "nuclear" and (b) without an insertion indicator, I think this would give me WITERN. So
I think I'm off-base here. I see "nuclear explosion" possibly resulting in the so-called "nuclear winter," but then "nuclear" would be pulling double-duty. I don't get the "on...Ocean" part, unless it's part of a really long definition. I couldn't find a
Winter Island in the Arctic, but there is one off Antarctica, where presumably winter is June-ish to September-ish. Or am I missing the point(s) here?
I didn't know there was a Winter Island in the Arctic and it doesn't play any part in my clue. It seems to me that you equate December to February with winter without considering that this is only the case in the northern hemisphere. Winter is June to
August in the southern hemisphere. That's why you missed Mark's clue. He's in the US; I'm in Australia.
So, to define WINTER, "December to February" needs an example indicator to locate it in the northern hemisphere. I happened to choose an island in the Arctic Ocean (for reasons I will explain in a minute).
The (not) missing insertion indicator is "about". "Write about nuclear" means insert "n" into write. It doesn't matter where you insert it because the anagram indicator, "explosion", comes last, so the anagramming happens after the insertion.
N = Nuclear is in Chambers.
If the surface seems a little arbitrary, the largest nuclear explosion to date (ever, hopefully) was Russia's Tsar Bomba, which was detonated a little over sixty years ago above Severny Island, which is in the Arctic Ocean. So I guess the clue's about
going there to research what effect the explosion had on the island. Or something ...
Thanks for moderating,
Steve = : ^ )
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