ing them at the same sites would have severely limited any effort to measure true craters by coring and drilling. In the case of the crater from Shot 3, any such extensive operation would have been long deferred because of radiological safety considerations. In determining the depth of craters, both sonic fathometer and lead~line sounding measurements were utilized. It is pertinent that the fathometer survey of the Shot 1 crater showed a uniform flat bottom at a depth of 170 feet; however, this flat bottom un. doubtedly represented the upper surface layer of mud and suspended sand which was settling in the crater. By contrast, lead-line soundings taken at approximately the same TABLE 4.1 CRATER 6URVES DATA All results are based on fathometer, lead line socndiages, anc serial surveys. There was branching of the reef to the lagoon side for Shots 1 and 3. siter Aerial Pathometer eight of Preshot Water Depth at tt ft Shot Location Yield 1 Coral Reef 15.0 Mt 0 q 15.4 above water 3 laland 130 ke 1 24 13.6 above : 5 G.G. of Device ground 16.2 above Bite Zero caer Diameter Crater Depth ft ft 6 6,000 240 0 800 bi. 160 3,000 Li » Formation None § water 20 above MLWSs* 4 Water (barge) 7.0 Mt i 6 , 17 above water 250T 90t None apparent * Mean low water springs. 1 Below water surface. t Below original lagoon bottom. £ The Shot 3 crater formed a “U” in the island with the open end on the lagoon side. There was no lip apparent at the time of survey in the shallow water of the open face of the “U.” On the land around the crater, Mp formation was fragmentary and nad one peak extending 30 feet above the original ground level. In general, the lip was lesa than 16 feet above the original ground level; however, the water wave from abot 4 had completely inundated the lip before the lip survey was made. time recorded a depth of 240 feet, which is considered to be the Shot 1 depth of crater. This emphasizes that when there is suspended material in the water, the use of the sonic fathometer is unreliable and not recommended. Vable 4.1 indicates the general results of this crater-survey project. Oae of the most significant aspects of Project 3.2 was that the crater-survey results caused serious questions to be raised (in the project report, WT-920) regarding the validity of the usually accepted cube-root scaling for prediction of nuclear~crater radii. This point stimulated considerable study, evaluation, and differences of opinion prior and subsequent to the publication of WT-920. However, after considerable additional study of existing high~explosive and nuclear crater data, an AFSWP report was published (Reference 10) which clarified the prior differences of opinion by carefully cataloged conclusions in favor of the continued use of the cube-root scaling procedure for predicting crater radii. Significant conclusions of Reference 10 regarding crater predictions were: (1) For a given energy release, the cratering effectiveness of an explosive charge will in general decrease with increasing energy density. (2) A commonsoil factor of 1.8 to 2.0 should be used in conjunction with TM 23-200 (Reference 7, Figure 32, crater-radius prediction curve for dry soil) as the ratio between scaled crater radii at the EPG (washed soil crater) and the Nevada Test Site (dry soil crater) for both high-explosive and nuclear-device craters. (3) The cube- root scaling law can be used for prediction of crater radii, whereas the scaling relation65

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