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CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION
1.1

OBJECTIVE

Project 2.3, Operation CASTLE, was part of a research program
sponsored by the Armed Forces Spec!ai Weapons Project (AFSWP) aimed a+
prediction of blast damage to forested areas from atomic explosions. A
knowledge of blast damage to forested areas provides a means of assessing the degree of damage to material and personnel and/or the amount of
cover the forest affords. Degree of blowdown to the forest stand will
also impede troop movements through or out of the area.
The objectives of this project were:
1. To determine blast damage to trees in terms of stem breakage,
branch breakage, and defoliation where effects are influenced by their
location in a naturel tree stand.
2. To determine the effect of natural forest cover on the shock
wave in terms of its peak static overpressure and peak dynamic pressure

attenuation.
3. To provide individual tree breakage data in the region of
long positive phase duration times in order to substantiate the basis
for breakage predictions.
The degree of momentum exchange between the shock wave and obstacles, such es trees in a stand, capable of absorbing substantial amounts
of energy is not well known. There is no immediate theoretical or
scaled model method of analyzing the interaction of shock wave and trees
in a neturai tree stand; therefore it was necessary to achieve stated
cbjectives experimentelly.
CASTLE presented an opportunity to make measurements on a natural
stand several times larger than the Operation UPSHCT-KNOTHOLES/ experimental stand. Even though the natural stand was composed of tropicel
trees, breakage data were desirable since continental tests in forested
areas are not imminent.

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AFSwr, UPSHCT-KNOTHOLE, Project 3.19, Blast Damaze to Coniferous

Tree Stands by Atouic Explosions, WT-731, January 1954.

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