http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and_science/science/2013/05/nuclear_weapons_tests_on_trees_jasons_moved_a_forest_to_the_nevada_test.html?wpisrc=newsletter_slatest_morning_newsletter

from SLATE

How Do We Know Nuclear Bombs Blow Down Forests?
Because we built a forest in Nevada and blew it down.

By Ann Finkbeiner | Posted Friday, May 31, 2013, at 10:31 AM

About 10 years ago, while doing research for a book, I asked Freeman
Dyson about a study he’d helped do about whether we would have lost
the war in Vietnam a little less if we’d used tactical nuclear
weapons. Dyson and two colleagues, all members of a scientific
advisory group called Jason, were doing this study back in the
mid-1960s, more or less on their own hook; no one had asked either
them or Jason to do it. They did it anyway because they’d overheard a
Pentagon power honcho remark offhand that it might be a good idea to
throw in a nuke once in a while [!!] just to keep the North Vietnamese
guessing. The remark reflected loose talk at the time that a few nukes
dropped on mountain passes might block the passes and stop the enemy
army from coming south. “You can do that wonderfully well with a few
bombs,” Dyson said. “You blow down all the trees.” And I thought, “How
does he know that?”

It turns out that while tactical (i.e., little) nuclear bombs do blow
down trees wonderfully well, the large enemy army only has to clear a
path through the blown-down trees and keep moving south. “It’s only
bought you a couple of months,” Dyson said. “And you can’t blow down
the same trees twice. After you’ve blown them down, that’s it.” He was
snickering. I didn’t bother asking him how he knew this and didn’t
think about it again until a couple of weeks ago.

I was interviewing another scientist who started digressing into the
old nuclear bomb tests out in Nevada. “Tree blow-down was
experimental,” he said, meaning they knew how nuclear bombs blew down
trees because they’d done it.

Once the United States had built the first atomic bomb in 1945, it
then improved it by building the first hydrogen bomb in 1952. It then
began working on building more portable bombs, and since the Soviet
Union had done the same, the United States also wondered about the
bombs’ effects. So in the early 1950s, the government set up models of
all the things that bombs could blow up—houses, bridges, cars, pigs,
sheep—and exploded bombs near them. The government did this for at
least a decade and didn’t stop until it and the rest of the world
banned above-ground testing. The tests, many of them at the Nevada
Test Site, were called “shots,” and they had names.

The shot called Encore was on May 8, 1953, and among the many effects
it tested was what a nuclear bomb would do to a forest. The Nevada
Test Site wasn’t replete with forests, so the U.S. Forest Service
brought 145 ponderosa pines from a nearby canyon and cemented them
into holes lined up in tidy rows in an area called Frenchman Flat,
6,500 feet from ground zero. Then the Department of Defense
air-dropped a 27-kiloton bomb that exploded 2,423 feet above the model
forest. The heat set fire to the forest, then the blast wave blew down
the trees and put out some fires and started others. Here’s the video.

I’m not sure what I make of this. Certainly in the 1950s nobody was
controlling nuclear weapons; they were alive, reproducing, and roaming
the world. So knowing precisely what damage they cause might help
mitigate that damage. And certainly I’m not going to think about the
more distant and longer-term effects of those shots, more than 200 of
them above ground, except to say that as a 10-year old girl in
Illinois, even I wasn’t safe.

I do know I’m impressed by the amount of directed effort, the
thoroughness of thought that went into cutting down 145 ponderosa
pines, trucking them out of the canyon, digging holes, filling them
with concrete, sticking the trees into them, dropping the bomb, and
beginning the measurements. And though the United Nations belatedly
began negotiating a ban on above-ground tests in 1955, the Limited
Test Ban Treaty didn’t get signed until 1963. That was the limited
treaty; the comprehensive one banning all tests everywhere took
another 40-plus years, and even now the United States hasn’t ratified
it.* I’m most impressed by the contrast between the pointed
determination of the test shots and the infinite dithering about the
(yes, infinitely more complicated) test bans. I might suspect that
human nature and its governments have a dark side.

Add this little public service booklet, illustrated with the drawing
above and written by the Atomic Energy Commission to the people of
Nevada:

“You are in a very real sense active participants in the Nation’s
atomic test program. ... Some of you have been inconvenienced by our
test operations. At times some of you have been exposed to potential
risk from flash, blast, or fall-out. You have accepted the
inconvenience or the risk without fuss, without alarm, and without
panic. Your cooperation has helped achieve an unusual record of
safety.”

As though they were asked.

This article originally appeared in The Last Word on Nothing. Tagline:
“Science says the first word on everything, and the last word on
nothing”—Victor Hugo.

Correction, May 31, 2013: This article originally stated that the
Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty has not been signed by the
United States. President Clinton signed the treaty, but the Senate has
not ratified it.
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to