Nevada Nuclear Weapon Test Site, USA / by Alastair Wiper

The Nevada National Security Site, 105 km northwest of Las Vegas, was established in 1951 to test nuclear devices. Covering approximately 3,500 km2 of desert and mountainous terrain, atomic testing at the site began in 1951. Over the subsequent four decades, over 1,000 nuclear explosions were detonated at the site. Many of the iconic images of the nuclear era come from the site.

The mushroom clouds from the tests could be seen from Las Vegas and became a popular tourist attraction during the 1950s, with partygoers gathering at dawn on the rooftops of Vegas casinos, cocktail in hand, to witness the explosions. Fallout was regularly carried on the wind, and increases in cancers such as leukaemia, lymphoma, thyroid cancer, brain cancer, brain tumours and others were reported in the area from the mid-1950s.

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".

 
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