who can fill this vacuum be undertaken and prosecuted to its completion. LOCATION OF AN ATOMIC WEAPONS PROVING GROUND The selection of a site suitable for testing atomic weapons involves many considerations which are difficult to reconcile. The widely current belief in the pervasiveness and the deadly effect of an atomic explosion now makes it necessary to conduct such tests in an area far removed from human habitation. In reality, the interests of safety require only that the site be (1) located in an area in which the winds can be depended upon to drift the cloud away from inhabited areas and (Z) isolated only to the extent necessary to avoid the injury to personnel and the damage to property which might result from the heat and concussion produced by the explosion. Otherwise, isolation is important only as an adjunct to security. Weather has been an important factor in all atomic tests con- ducted in the past and it is likely to remain so in the future because of foreseeable difficulties in the operation of cloud-sampling aircraft, the limitations of ground and aerial photographic techniques, and the effect of wind drift on the dispersion of the atomic cloud. Weather conditions favorable to the conduct of tests gust include (1) good visibility between the point of detonation and camera positions in the air and on the ground, (2) absence of precipitation in a wide area around the point of detonation, (3) a minimum of cloud cover, and (4) wind characteristics in which a great degree of reliability with regard to velocity and direction at all altitudes prevails. Section VIII Finally,

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