Chapter 2—The Nuclear Testing Program © 17

Phoro credit Daud Graham, 1988

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Flat, although Pahute Mesa is now generally reserved for high-yield tests.
Tests up to 1,000 kilotons in yield have occurred
beneath Pahute Mesa, a 170 square mile area in the
extreme north-western part of the test site. The deep
water table of Pahute Mesa permits underground
testing in dry holes at depths as great as 2,100 feet.
The distant iocation is useful for high-yield tests
because it minimizes the chance that ground motion
will cause damageoffsite.
Both Livermore National Laboratory and Los
Alamos National Laboratory have specific areas of
the test site reserved for their use. Los Alamos uses
areas 1, 3, 4(east), 5, and 7 in Yucca Flat and area 19

on Pahute Mesa; Livermoreusesareas 2, 4(west), 8.
9, and 10 in YuccaFlat, and area 20 on Pahute Mesa
(figure 2-2). While Los Alamos generally uses
Pahute Mesa only to relieve schedule conflicts on

Yucca Flat, Livermore normally usesit for large test
explosions where the depth of burial would require
the test to be below the water table on Yucca Flat.
The Nevada Test Site employs over 11,000
people, with about 5,000 of them workingonthe site
proper. The annual budget is approximately $1
billion divided among testing nuclear weapons
(81%) and the developmentofa storage facility for

radioactive waste (19%). The major contractorsare
Reynolds Electrical & Engineering Co., Inc. (REECo)

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