And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Source:
<A HREF="http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/lv-
other/1999/jan/24/508316294.html
other/1999/jan/24/508316294.html">

http://www.lasvegassun.com/sunbin/stories/lv-other/1999/jan/24/508316294.html
</A>
======================================================
January 24, 1999

Radiation research tests the remnants of long nuke history

By Mary Manning 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
LAS VEGAS SUN

Nevada has a 41-year history with nuclear experiments less than 100 miles
northwest of Las Vegas, and researchers are still wrestling with the
consequences.

The United States began experimenting with nuclear weapons underground in June
1946 in the Pacific Islands. The experimenting continued until a moratorium
was imposed in 1992 at the Nevada Test Site.

Testing began in Nevada in 1951. Government scientists conducted above-ground
and underground nuclear blasts for more than 12 years at the Test Site until a
test ban treaty was signed with the Soviet Union. Above-ground blasts were
then stopped.

Underground tests to determine peaceful purposes for atomic explosions were
conducted in the 1960s in central and northwestern Nevada, Colorado, New
Mexico, Mississippi and one of the Aleutian Islands off the coast of Alaska.

There have been 921 underground U.S. nuclear tests conducted in 878 shafts and
tunnels on the Nevada Test Site, a report released last week shows.

Department of Energy information about the Test Site had been kept secret
until the 1990s. Nuclear physicist Anthony Hechanova spent four years at the
Harry Reid Center for Environmental Studies at UNLV going through the DOE
records. He compiled the report that details what went on during the 41 years
of testing.

Hechanova found that 260 underground nuclear experiments had been conducted at
or below the Test Site's ground-water table. It is those tests that concern
scientists cleaning up the contamination from the blasts because they fear
radiation may be moving in the underground streams toward populated areas.

During the testing days, people throughout the country protested, sometimes by
massing at the gates of the Test Site. Residents of neighboring Utah were
especially upset by the above-ground tests and their radioactive clouds of
fallout drifting from the Nevada Test Site into their communities.

In 1989, at the request of Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, the Office of Technology
Assessment started evaluating government practices to contain and monitor
nuclear testing.

The Office of Technology report, which took six months and was the first in-
depth public look at the government nuclear experiments, noted that everything
changed after the unexpected release of 54,000 curies of radiation into the
air during the 1970 underground Baneberry blast.

Baneberry, named after a desert shrub that produces white berries, exposed 900
workers. The families of two security guards filed a lawsuit claiming that the
guards died from the radiation exposure. After more than 10 years in federal
court, the claims were denied.

After Baneberry, a Containment Evaluation Panel was created with much stricter
guidelines on containing underground nuclear experiments.


If a person stood at the Test Site's border in the path of maximum radiation
since Baneberry, "that person's total exposure would be equivalent to one one-
thousandths of a single chest X-ray," the Office of Technology report said.

About 90 percent of all nuclear explosions were blasted up to a mile
underground in vertical holes drilled into Yucca Flat. Built-in safeguards
made chances of an accidental release "as remote as possible," the report
said.

Distrust of the DOE rose with its reluctance to disclose information on tests,
the report said.

Also, not all leaks or seeps were announced. In 1988, the Office of Technology
reported about 100 underground nuclear devices were blasted in ground water.

About 22 wells on-site and 29 wells off-site were tested monthly. Employees
with the DOE's contractor, the former Reynolds Electric & Engineering Co.,
sampled on-site while the federal Environmental Protection Agency checked off-
site wells.

The report estimated the ground water flowed between 10 and 600 feet a year.
Currently there is no public information on where the most rapid travel might
be occurring.
=======================================================

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Quote from Truman's diary July 25, 1945:  "We have discovered the most
terrible bomb in the history of the world.  It may be the fire destruction
prophesized in the Euphrates Valley Era, after Noah and his fabulous Ark.
Anyway we think we have found the way to cause the disintegration of the
atom."

"The Doctor of the future will give No Medicine, but will interest his
patients in the care of the human frame, in diet, and in the cause and
prevention of disease."
-Attributed to Thomas Alva Edison



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