You've seen the images: eerie black-and-white footage of nuclear blasts obliterating fake towns, mannequins reduced to dust in an instant.
Just 105 km from Las Vegas, the Nevada National Security Site (NNSS) was ground zero for over 1,000 nuclear explosions between 1951 and 1992. In the '50s, mushroom clouds became a twisted tourist attraction—partygoers sipped cocktails on Vegas rooftops at dawn, watching the sky ignite.
Then came the fallout—both literal and medical. Rising cancer rates. A landscape forever changed. And while nuclear testing officially ended in 1992, the site’s secretive work continues. What happens there now?
In 1962 atmospheric tests were stopped, and the tests moved underground. In 1992, the United States agreed to honour the Comprehensive National Test Ban Treaty, and underground testing ended. Today the site contains several facilities for maintaining and developing the US nuclear stockpile without detonating atomic bombs.
Part of a long-term project I am working on called "How We Learned to Stop Worrying".