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- [originally posted November 1993 to the Skunk Works Digest mailing list.
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-
-
- While skunk-works-digest may not be completely appropriate for this trip
- report, here's a summary of what Bruce Henderson (bruce@pages.com) and
- I saw on a tour of the Nevada Nuclear Test Site on Nov. 18th.
-
- About 20 people met at the Department of Energy (DOE) Las Vegas, a pretty
- non-descript building near I-15 and Spring Mountain Road. We met our
- guides, a couple of veteran Cold Warriors. After about a 65 mile (104 km) trip
- on US Highway 95, we turned into the gate and were given ID badges with
- radiation sensors (oddly enough, made by Panasonic). After being inspected
- by Wackenhut security personnel, we stopped in the "company town" of
- Mercury. As we went past Wackenhut's security headquarters, we noticed
- a large number of unmarked security vehicles (with red and blue lights
- on top only). In addition to the Blazers and pickup trucks others have
- reported up at Groom Lake, we also saw dune buggies and armored vehicles
- with gun mounts on the roof. Best sign - over Guard Station 200, there
- is a sign that says "Welcome to the Nevada Test Site, an environmental
- research park."
-
- After picking up water and hard hats, we left Mercury for Frenchman Flat,
- where air burst nuclear tests were done in the 50s. We saw a number of blast
- damaged structures including domes of 6 inch (15 cm.) thick reinforced
- concrete that were crushed like an eggshell. We also got to see the remains
- of Motel Row, whose walls had been blasted out. Oddly enough there was
- ancient graffiti on one wall stating "Bob sucks". After we left Frenchman
- Flat, we were given a tour of the nearby low-level nuclear waste facility
- in Area 5. The tour was given by a woman named Cindy who appeared to have
- drunk far too much coffee and was hyperactive. We got to see the DOE
- people burying drums and boxes of nuclear waste in a big trench. (If the
- Test Site property is ever returned to the Washoe tribe of Native Americans,
- they will get a big surprise if they start looking for ancestral burial
- grounds...)
-
- Next, we visited CP-1, the command post for nuclear testing. It sits on a
- hill overlooking Frenchman Flat, and Yucca Flat (where underground tests
- are performed). CP-1 is sort of like NASA's Mission Control, with large screen
- video and computer monitors. We were shown a couple of films about testing,
- with the highlight being the ground collapsing into a concave depression
- as the molten earth far below cooled. One of Bruce's friends tried to talk
- a guy from DOE into letting us be present at the next test... They also
- had a large map of the Test Site on one wall, showing some of the surrounding
- land (more on this later).
-
- We headed north into Yucca Flat and saw numerous craters created by
- underground nuclear testing. The bus driver drove the DOE bus down into
- Bilby Crater. We headed north and stopped at Sedan Crater, a huge crater
- where the idea of using nuclear weapons for peaceful construction purposes
- was tested. The crater was about 100 feet (31 meters) deep. Some people had
- rolled tires down the crater to see how far up the opposite wall they would
- go. After seeing the map in CP-1 that showed Groom Lake, I realized that we
- were about 15 miles from Groom Lake. I joked around with one of the old
- DOE guys and asked when the tour would be allowed to go past Guard Station
- 700 on Mercury Highway and up to Groom Lake. He said that even he was not
- allowed up there (this was a senior official who had been in charge of
- numerous nuclear tests). Unfortunately, we couldn't get any of the T-shirts
- he told us about that have a picture of a nuclear blast on them with the
- logo, "Made in America, Tested in Japan"...
-
- We then went up towards Rainier Mesa and P-Tunnel. P-Tunnel is a series of
- long tunnels drilled in the side of a mountain, where nuclear weapons
- effects are tested. After putting on hard hats and mine rescue equipment,
- we boarded a mine train into the tunnels. A very impressive piece of civil
- engineering!! We saw the large pipes where small yield weapons are detonated,
- so that a blast of radiation travels up the pipe towards the electronic
- equipment or satellite that is being tested. Immediately after the blast,
- explosive devices seal the pipe so radioactive gases and debris are
- contained. (Several techniques are used such as pinching the pipe (imagine
- pinching a soda straw, but on a large scale) and having doors closed by
- explosives block off the pipe. We were lucky that the Defense Nuclear
- Agency allowed us to visit their part of the Test Site. (Apparently,
- P-Tunnel is not part of the normal tour).
-
- After that, we headed back to Mercury, turned our badges in, and went back
- to Las Vegas. Several observations about the Test Site -- it is large
- (approximately 1350 square miles (3456 square kilometers) -- larger than
- the state of Rhode Island). The terrain is typical Mojave desert / Death
- Valley terrain -- a series of flat valleys surrounded by mountains. If
- you plan on taking the tour, you should call Brenda at DOE External Affairs
- (702) 295-0494 soon, because they may not do tours much longer. This is
- because the Test Site is starting to close down, particularly because of
- the current moratorium on nuclear testing.
-
- "Nuclear weapons are cool! Hunh! Hunh!" (bruce@pages.com doing his Beavis &
- Butthead impression)
-
- Paul McGinnis / TRADER@cup.portal.com
-