bay doors yawned open and the bomb and its parachute plummeced
downward.

The plane turned and sped away at full power.

The

parachute opened, and the bomb drifted slowly down over the bustling
city and, at about one quarter of a mile above tliroshina's
‘Industrial Promotion Hall, it exploded.
It is in the description of such events

that

the

limits

of language are approached; even pictures, while more descriptive,
ultimately must fail in conveying

the ultimate ferocity and horror

of an atomic explosion over a populated city.
In millionths of a second, a huge radioactive fireball
‘existed where there was once blue sky.

In the next instant

some 19,663 buildings within one kilometer of the hypocenter were
destroyed in the gigantic thunderclap.

More than 60,000 people

were immediately burned to death by the thermal wave or crushed
to death by the pressure wave.

Thousands of others were pene-

trated by powerful. neutron and gamma rays.

The expanding, fireball

then sped upward toward the heavens from whence it cane, pulling
up behind it the ash and smoke of the incinerated people and
buildings until ic finally slowed and peaked at the limits of the
troposphere, nudging the base of the stratospherc.
Feet below,

Thirty thousand

the city of Hiroshima was the scene of a fiery holocaust;

the buildings ignited within a mile of the center began to burn ag
air rushed in to follow the hot fireball's ascent.

Winds of 39 to

40 miles per hour fanned the flames of the already blistered and

We

spins

Select target paragraph3