Home > Atomic Bomb At Bikini Atoll In 1946....
Click image to enlarge 566364
Hide image list »

Atomic Bomb At Bikini Atoll In 1946....



Item # 566364

Currently Unavailable. Contact us if you would like to be placed on a want list or to be notified if a similar item is available.



July 25, 1946

THE DETROIT NEWS, Michigan, July 25, 1946

* Bikini Atoll
* Atomic Bomb
* Under Water Explosion


This 56 page newspaper has a nice two line banner headline on the the front page: "A-Test Mixed Beauty, Horror---Carlisle; ARKANSAS, SARATOGA SUNK" with subheads and related photo. (see) Nice photos of the explosion on the back page as well.

Other news of the day throughout. Rag edition in nice condition.

wikipedia notes: Bikini Atoll (also known as Pikinni Atoll) is an uninhabited 2.3-square-mile (6.0 km²) atoll in one of the Micronesian Islands in the Pacific Ocean, part of Republic of the Marshall Islands. It consists of 36 islands surrounding a 229.4-square-mile (594.1 km²) lagoon. As part of the Pacific Proving Grounds it was the site of more than 20 nuclear weapons tests between 1946 and 1958, including the first test of a practical dry fuel hydrogen bomb in 1952.

The navigator and explorer Otto von Kotzebue named Bikini Atoll Eschscholtz Atoll after the scientist Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz.

Preceding the nuclear tests, the indigenous population was relocated to Rongerik Atoll. The United States government enrolled some of the Marshallese into a secret medical experiment called Project 4.1. The intent of the project was to study the effects of radiation on human beings. Government and mainstream historical sources point to the study being organized on March 6 or March 7, 1954, six days after the Bravo shot. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, some of the original islanders returned from Kili Island but were later removed because of the high radioactivity.

Category: The 20th Century