Chapter 2—The Nuclear Testing Program @ 15

OTHER LOCATIONS OF
NUCLEAR TESTS

was a salvo shot of three explosions, each with a
yield of 33 kt, detonated near Rifle on May 17. 1973.

U.S. nuclear test explosions were also conducted
in areas other than the Pacific and the Nevada Test

Alaska. The first (October 29, 1965), *‘Long Shot’’
was an 80 kiloton explosion that waspart of the Vela
Uniform project. The secondtest, **‘Milrow,’* October 2, 1969, was about a one megaton explosion to
‘‘calibrate’’ the island and assure that it would
contain a subsequent test of the Spartan AntiBallistic Missile warhead. The third test. ‘*Cannikin,’’ November 6, 1971, was the Spartan warhead
test with a reported yield of “‘less than five

Site.

Three tests with yields of 1 to 2 kilotons were
conducted over the South Atlantic as ‘*Operation
Argus.’’ The tests (‘‘Argus I,’’ Aug. 27, 1958;
**ArgusII,’’ Aug. 30, 1958; and *‘ArgusIII,’ Sept.
6, 1958) were detonated at an altitude of 300 miles
to assess the effects of high-altitude nuclear detonations on communications equipment and missile
performance.
Five tests, all involving chemical explosions but
with no nuclear yield, were conducted at the Nevada
Bombing Range to study plutonium dispersal. The
tests, “Project 57 NO 1,’’ April 24, 1957; *‘Double
Tracks,’’ May 15, 1963; ‘‘Clean Slate 1,’’ May 25,
1963; ‘‘Clean Slate II,"’ May 31, 1963; and *‘Clean
Slate III,’’ June 9, 1963; were safety tests to establish
storage and transportation requirements.
Twotests were conducted in the Tatum Salt Dome
near Hattiesburg, Mississippi, as part of the Vela
Uniform experiments to improve seismic methods of
detecting underground nuclear explosions. Thefirst
test ‘*Salmon,’’ October 22, 1964, was a 5.3 kiloton
explosion that formed an underground cavity. The
subsequenttest ‘‘Sterling,’” December 3, 1966, was
0.38 kt explosion detonated in the cavity formed by
Salmon. The purpose of the Salmon/Sterling experiment was to assess the use of a cavity in reducing the
size of seismic signals produced by an underground

nuclear test.!7

Three joint government-industry tests were conducted as part of the Plowshare Program to develop
peaceful uses of nuclear explosions. The experiments were designed to improve natural gas extraction by fracturing rock formations. Thefirst test,
**Gasbuggy,’’ was a 29 kiloton explosion detonated
on December 10, 1967, near Bloomfield, New
Mexico. The next two were in Colorado: ‘‘Rulison’’

was a 40 kiloton explosion, detonated near Grand

Valley on September 10, 1969; and ‘*Rio Blanco”’

Three tests were conducted on AmchitkaIsland,

megatons.’’ This test, by far the highest-yield

underground test ever conducted by the United
States, was too large to be safely conducted in

Nevada.!8

Three individual tests were also conducted in
variousparts of the western United States. **Gnome™
was a 3 kiloton test conducted on December 10,
1961 near Carlsbad, New Mexico, to create a large
underground cavity in salt as part of a multipurpose
experiment. One application was the possible use of
the cavity for the storage of oil and gas. © Shoal”"
was a 12 kiloton test conducted on October 26, 1963
near Fallon, Nevada as part of the Vela Uniform
project. ‘‘Faultless’’ was a test with a vield of
between 200 and 1,000 kiloton that was expioded on
January 19, 1968, at a remote area near Hot Creek
Valley, Nevada. Faultless was a ground-mouon
calibration test to evaluate a Central Nev ada Supplemental Test Area. The area was proposed as 4
alternative location for high-yield tests to decrease
the ground shaking in Las Vegas.

THE NEVADATESTSITE
The Nevada Test Site is located 65 miles northwest of Las Vegas. It covers 1,350 square miles. an
area slightly larger than Rhode Island (figure 2-2).
The test site is surrounded on three sides by an
additional 4,000 to 5,000 square miles belonging to
Nellis Air Force Base and the Tonopah Test Range.
Thetest site has an administrative center. a control

point, and areas where varioustesting activiues are

conducted.

Atthe southern endofthetest site is Mercury, the
administrative headquarters and supply base tor

'7For a complete discussion of the issues related to Seismic Verification see, U.S. Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, Seismu Verification
ofNuclear Testing Treaties, OTA-ISC-361, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, May 1988.
\8The predictions of ground motion suggested that an unacceptable amount(in termsof claims and dollars) of damage would occur to structures if
the test was conducted in Nevada.

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