Trinity

Trinity test fallout

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    Trinity Test Fallout

    The first nuclear test on American soil causes the first large scale fallout of radioactive material.
  • Trinity test site

    Trinity test site

    -- Trinity site selection and initial construction begin; chosen for remoteness and secrecy on the White Sands Proving Ground (New Mexico).

    -- The population surrounding the chosen site was sparse.

    -- This test site was conveniently located 200 miles southeast of Los Alamos National Laboratory.
  • Bomb travels to Trinity test site

    Bomb travels to Trinity test site

    -- Plutonium core components (two hemispheres of the “gadget”) are moved from Los Alamos toward the Trinity test site for final assembly.

    -- This famous picture captures the moment the core was brought into the new facility.

    -- Construction of the bomb began under the trinity tower.
  • Days before the blast

    Days before the blast

    -- The Bomb's components were assembled at the base of the testing tower.

    -- The cold night air made fitting the components difficult having previously been fit in warm and indoor environments in California.

    -- These hurdles were overcome and the bomb was assembled the next day.
  • Hours before the blast.

    Hours before the blast.

    -- Reporters were loaded into a caravan of buses, cars and trucks at 11 pm and headed out of Albuquerque New Mexico to a destination 125 miles to the Southeast, all to witness the detonation.

    -- The "lucky" reporters were given sunscreen for their faces and were told to lay prone with their heads away from the blast.
    -- some reported seeing the surrounding mountains lit up by the light from the blast.
  • Teenagers playing in the fallout

    Teenagers playing in the fallout

    -- Unaware of the test, and the dangers of radiation local teenagers played in the "warm snow" of the fallout as large white flakes fell on downwind municipalities.
    -- Some were reported to have rubbed the flakes into their skin surprised at the warmth of these snow-like flakes.
    -- The local residents were neither informed or warned of the dangers.
  • The blast

    The blast

    -- Trinity detonation at ~5:29 a.m. Mountain War Time, the tower vaporized.
    -- A glassy surface (“Trinitite”) formed at the explosion site and made a crater 8 ft deep and 800 yards wide producing a highly radioactive plume that drifted over nearby communities.

    -- The plume of the explosion estimated beforehand to reach 12,000 feet actually was observed at 70,000 feet,
  • Downwinders begin to get sick

    Downwinders begin to get sick

    -- By the late 40's residents in Lincoln, Otero, Sierra, and Socorro counties begin reporting higher-than-expected cancers and other illnesses.

    -- While epidemiologic links to Trinity fallout are not immediately established, some doctors and scientists begin to suspect a connection between these illnesses and the nuclear testing.
    -- Many experiencing these illnesses had no family history of such cancers or heart issues.
  • Nuclear testing continues

    Nuclear testing continues

    -- Nuclear testing continues through 1962.

    -- More than 96 tests that year.
    -- 300 nuclear tests are conducted from 1945 through the end of 1962 and maps of radioactive clouds like this one are produced by Government agencies.
  • "The smile"

    "The smile"

    -- Reports of some New Mexico residents calling the scar from thyroid cancer surgery "The Smile"
    -- It was reported from one resident that more and more of their friends and acquaintances are afflicted with this disease.

    -- It has come to some folks in New Mexico to be associated with nuclear fallout illnesses and the tests at the Trinity site.
  • Remediation at the trinity site begins

    Remediation at the trinity site begins

    -- In 1967 excavation and removal of contaminated soil took place with the goal of managing the radioactive material produced by the first blast.

    --10 train boxcars of the trinitite glass were scraped off the desert floor and taken away.
    -- A fence was added around the area to limit civilian exposure.
  • Those teenagers playing in the fallout are dying.

    Those teenagers playing in the fallout are dying.

    -- By the 70's many of those teenagers who were out playing in the "warm snow" at a campsite near the explosion had died before the age of 40.

    -- Many other individuals exposed to early fallout report premature illnesses and deaths.
    -- Scientific and legal communities wrestle with proving individual causation from dispersed low-level exposures.
  • RECA is enacted

    RECA is enacted

    -- Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) enacted to provide statutory compensation for eligible downwinders (Nevada) and uranium workers.
    -- Program specifies eligibility criteria and payment amounts by claim type.

    -- One time payment of $50,000-$100,000 from the U.S. government for damages.
  • The last Nuclear test on American soil

    The last Nuclear test on American soil

    -- On September 23 1992 the last test on American soil, "Divider" was conducted.

    -- This test was underground.

    -- The test was carried out one week before a moratorium on nuclear testing went into effect.
  • RECA extended

    RECA extended

    -- The 2024-2025 congress extended the application deadline for RECA to 2027.

    -- The program expanded eligibility to include post-1971 miners of uranium done on behalf of the government.

    -- This was finalized in the first few months of this year.