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On Oct. 17 Soviet Premier Nikolay Aleksandrovich Bulganin wrote to President Eisenhower, "We fully share the opinion recently expressed by certain prominent figures in the United States concerning the necessity and the possibility of concluding an agreement on the matter of prohibiting atomic weapon tests".
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It cannot be coincidental that an era that watched a Pacific theater of war, revisited by atomic weapon testing, thought to comfort itself with nostalgia for things native, creating island cocktails.
It was on Bikini, one of the northern atolls, that the US military detonated 67 nuclear bombs between 1946 and 1958 as part of the atomic weapon test programme.
The military later revealed that this wasn't a simple weather balloon, but an aircraft used for clandestine purposes -- part of the Army's top secret "Project Mogul -- to monitor atomic weapon testing in the old Soviet Union.
During 1946, Flusser took part in the atomic weapons tests in the Marshall Islands.
And in those rocks they've identified the traces of human activity, specifically radiation stemming from atomic weapons tests.
In 1951, Morgan became Controller of Atomic Energy, and was present for Operation Hurricane, the first British atomic weapons tests at the Montebello Islands in 1952.
In his role as Controller of Atomic Energy, Morgan was present for Operation Hurricane, the first British atomic weapons tests at the Montebello Islands in October 1952.
On Oct. 3, 1952, the first British atomic weapons test, called Hurricane, was successfully conducted aboard the frigate HMS Plym, with an estimated yield of 25 kilotons.
PLUTONIUM The Japanese authorities say they detected very small amounts of several forms of plutonium in soil near the plant, but they said it was unclear whether it came from the reactors or was a legacy of atmospheric atomic weapons testing.
It was a shock to discover traces of atomic weapons testing Ice is like a book; every time there is snow, the thickness of the ice increases, and when you look deeper and deeper into the ice, you go back in time – not only centuries, but tens of millennia, giving us a record of climatic conditions on Earth.
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