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Originally posted by rogue1
Originally posted by Frosty
Ah yes, 'it was the power of god' excuse. Because you fail to document why those at ground zero did not die or contract radiation.
What don't you understand ? It's there in Black and White, LOL. Sorry if it contradicts your inept knowledge. I think your last post goes to show you hvae no understanding of the subject matter being discussed.
Well, at least now I don't have to worry about responding to you,as facts don't seem to figure in your reasoning. Shame.
Originally posted by Frosty
Go on go on...tell me why those at ground zero did not contract fatal or near fatal doses of radiation? I'm still listening.
Originally posted by Frosty
Those two bombs have off yields at around 1 kt combined, you say Port of Chicago bomb was 5 kt, there is a slight difference here.
S.S. Malakand, a steamer belonging to the Brocklebank line, she was berthed at the Huskisson No-2 dock with over 1000 tons of shells and bombs destined for the Middle-east.
No one Knows how, but a deflated barrage balloon slipped free of its moorings and became tangled with the ships rigging, fell onto the deck and immediately burst into flames, the crew managed to extinguish the fire, however while they were occupied with this particular fire a shower of incendiaries and high-explosive bombs had ignited some neighbouring sheds, and the flames from these soon enveloped the stricken ship. Though the crew fought valiantly to save the ship it was to no avail and the captain ordered the crew to abandon the Malakand. Desperately and with disregard for their own safety Captain Kinley and his crew along with A.F.S. personnel led by Officer John Lappin, tried to scuttle the ship and prevent a terrible explosion. Despite all their efforts a few hours after the all clear Merseyside shook with one of the greatest explosions of the entire Blitz.
The whole dock was destroyed, the Overhead Railway line was badly damaged, with some of the ships plates being blown some two and a half miles away. Though the explosion was one of the biggest during the Blitz, only four people were killed, two of the party who had tried so valiantly to scuttle the Malakand, and a newly married couple who were on their way home along the Dock road, when a huge fragment of the ship landed directly on their car killing them outright.
Originally posted by Zaphod58
That was obviously a nuclear test, because blowing up our own ports and killing our own people in WWII was the best way to test our nuclear devices. It was the Magic Bomb that didn't leave nearly as much radiation as the later copies of the same device did, and worked perfectly on the first try, despite the fact that the later tests were fizzles.
Yes, for the humor impared, that was slightly sarcastic.
Originally posted by FredT
An accident nothing more. A bad one but, why would the US destory a major arms depot as a test? And one in close proximity to several major metropolitan areas.
Where are the reports of radiation or cancer clusters in the area? The background radiation at the Trinity site is still the equivilent of 3 chest xrays.
Originally posted by mbkennel
(1) the US would NOT intentionally blow up its own ship, carrying vitally important ammunition, in its own shipyard, during a war!! I mean WTF? People actually took the working for victory thing seriously because it was not at all clear then the US would win.
(2) would it somehow pack the only nuclear weapon ever in existence, made in a project so secret that few even in the military knew about its existence, into an ordinary freighter being loaded by hundreds of ordinary enlisted grunts, most of whom were black?
(3) they barely got enough fissile material in time in mid-late 1945.
(4) now known facts about the capacities and capabilities of the enrichment plants make it impossible for a weapon to be developed in 1944.
(5) the description of the nuclear weapons effects in that document? Note T-7. The "T" means theoretical division. At that time, it meant a whole lot of extremely smart people figuring out things all on their own from the laws of physics.
Originally posted by StellarX
I am not sure if this was really the result of a nuclear weapon test but i can assure you that the people in charge were easily capable of such atrocity.
Radiation poisoning ( and all the other fallout and exposure health riskes) is a rather poorly understood issue even today.
Originally posted by HowardRoark
Not just any naval base, but a major amunition shipping point also. A valuable link in the supply chain across the Pacific.
There were numerous survivors within a few hundred yard of the explosion. I've yet to hear of anyone that close to a nke and living to tell about it.
InNagasaki, some people survived uninjured who were far inside tunnel shelters built for conventional air raids and located as close as one-third mile from ground zero (the point directly below the explosion). This was true even though these long, large shelters lacked blast doors and were deep inside the zone within which all buildings were destroyed. (People far inside long, large, open shelters are better protected than are those inside small, open shelters.)
www.oism.org...
Originally posted by FredT
Yes, perhaps, but again I repeat, why detonate a nuclear device so close to major industrial (shipping, ports etc) and population cneters. If Indeed this was a giant Bush / Nazi cabal (You can also throw in the Kennedy clan as well) what purpose does it serve? While its fun and easy to throw out grandiose schemes people ALWAYS have a reson for doing something like this. What purpose was served here?
Seems pretty clear cut to me as well as groups like the CDC, OSHA et al.
The simple fact remains Port Chicago is located in a major urban area. While in 1944 it may not have been as big as it was now, the site of a ground burst nuclear weapon WOULD leave fall out and background radiation that at the very least would be spread over a pretty good size area.
Radiation is a causitive factor in cancer. one only has to look to the statistics compiled after the Hiroshima blasts that can be found here:
www.pcf.city.hiroshima.jp...
Fortunately, the human body can repair most radiation damage if the daily radiation doses are not too large. As will be explained in Appendix B, a person who is healthy and has not been exposed in the past two weeks to a total radiation dose of more than 100 R can receive a dose of 6 R each day for at least two months without being incapacitated.
Only a very small fraction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki citizens who survived radiation doses some of which were nearly fatal have suffered serious delayed effects. The reader should realize that to do essential work after a massive nuclear attack, many survivors must be willing to receive much larger radiation doses than are normally permissible. Otherwise, too many workers would stay inside shelter too much of the time, and work that would be vital to national recovery could not be done. For example, if the great majority of truckers were so fearful of receiving even non-incapacitating radiation doses that they would refuse to transport food, additional millions would die from starvation alone.
The authoritative study by the National Academy of Sciences, A Thirty Year Study of the Survivors qf Hiroshima and Nagasaki, was published in 1977. It concludes that the incidence of abnormalities is no higher among children later conceived by parents who were exposed to radiation during the attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki than is the incidence of abnormalities among Japanese children born to un-exposed parents.
www.oism.org...
Now to be fair, I did come across this website that purports to have taken neasurments in the area around Port Chicago. It did notice a few areas with higher than average radiation levels, but please note that the naval shipyard there did store nuclear weapons during the cold war and Mare Island was the home to many nuclear submarines.
ian.kluft.com...
Originally posted by Zaphod58
Here's another one. How is it that NOT ONE PERSON even showed signs of radiation sickness after the blast, but several miles away there is supposedly higher than normal background radiation from the blast, SIXTY YEARS LATER?