52 © The Containment of Underground Nuclear Explosions

distance of vertical drill hole shots ('/2 depth of
burial) for tests of the same yield (compare figures

3-2 and 3-3).

Consequently, neither material

strength, burial depth, nor separation distance
would make leakageto the surface morelikely for
a tunnel test on Rainier Mesa than for a vertical
drill hole tests on Yucca Flat.
Despite the relative lack of importanceofstrength
in preventing possible leakage to the surface, the
volume of material weakened or fractured by an

explosion is of interest because it could affect the
performance of the tunnel closures and possible
leakage of cavity gas to the tunnel complex. Dispute

overthe amountof rock fractured by an underground

nuclear explosion stems from the following two,
seemingly contradictory, but in fact consistent
observations:
1. Post-shot measurements of rock samples taken
from the tunnel complex generally show no change
in the properties of the rock at a distance greater than
3 cavity radii from the point of the explosion. This

observation implies that rock strength is measurably

decreased only within the small volumeof radius =

Photo credit Department of Energy

Fracture on Rainier Mesa.

been detonated in alluvial deposits, which are

essentially big piles of sediment with nearly no
internal strength in an unconfinedstate. Despite the
weakness and lack of cohesiveness of the material,
such explosions remain well contained.
Compared to vertical drill hole tests. tunnel tests
are overburied and conservatively spaced. The
tunnel system in Rainier Mesais at a depth of 1,300
feet. By the standards for vertical drill hole tests

(using the scaled depth formula), this is deep

enoughto test at yields of up to 34 kilotons; and yet
all tunnel tests are less than 20 kilotons.?? Consequently, all tunnel tests in Rainier Mesa are buried
at depths comparatively greater than vertical drill
hole tests on Yucca Flat. Furthermore, the minimum
separation distance of tunnel shots (twice the combined cavity radii plus 100 feet) results in a greater
separation distance than the minimum separation

165 (yield)”,38 where the radius is measuredin feet

from the point of the explosion and the yield is

measured in kilotons (figure 3-10).

2. Seismic recordings of underground explosions
at Rainier Mesa include signals that indicate the loss
of strength in a volume of rock whose radius 15
slightly larger than the scaled depth of burial. This
observation implies that the rock strength is decreased throughout the large volume of radius = 500

(yield)”, where the radius is measured in feet from

the point of the explosion and the yield is measured
in kilotons (figure 3-11). The loss of strength in a
large volume seems to be further supported by

cracks in the ground at the top of Rainier Mesa that
were created by nuclear tests.

Thefirst observation is based on tests of samples
obtained from drilling back into the rock surrounding the tunnel complex after a test explosion. The
core samples contain microfractures out to a distance
from the shot point equal to two cavity radii.
Although microfractures are not seen past two Cavity
radii, measurements of seismic shear velocities

36Depth( ft) = 400 (yield(kt))'4
37** Announced United States Nuclear Tests, July 1945 through December 1987."" United States Deparumemt of Energy, NVO-209(Rev.8). April, 1988.
38]f the radius of a cavity produced by an explosion is equal to 55 (yseld)!”, a distance ofthree cavity radii would be equal to three limes tms. or 165
(yield).

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