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-
- PROJECT TRINITY
- 1945-1946
-
- by Carl Maag and Steve Rohrer
-
-
-
-
- United States Atmospheric Nuclear Weapons Tests
- Nuclear Test Personnel Review
-
- Prepared by the Defense Nuclear Agency as Executive Agency for the
- Department of Defense
-
- Destroy this report when it is no longer needed.
- Do not return to sender.
-
-
- PLEASE NOITIfY THE DEFENSE NUCLEAR AGANCY,
- ATTN: STTI, WASINGTON D.C. 20305, IF
- YOUR ADDRESS IS INCORRECT, IF YOU WISH TO
- BE DELETED FROM THE DISTRIBUTION LIST, OR
- IF THE ADDRESSEE IS NO LONGER EMPLOYED BY
- YOUR ORGANIZATION.
-
-
-
-
-
- Since declassified
-
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS:
-
- LIST OF FIGURES
- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS
- REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE
- FACT SHEET
- PREFACE
-
- CHAPTERS:
- 1 INTRODUCTION
- 1.1 Historical Background of Project TRINITY
- 1.2 The Project TRINITY Site
- 1.3 The Project TRINITY Organization
- 1.4 Military and Civilian Participants in Project TRINITY
-
- 2 THE ACTIVITIES AT PROJECT TRINITY
- 2.1 Preshot Activities
- 2.2 Detonation and Postshot Activities
- 2.3 Activities after 16 July 1945
-
- 3 RADIATION PROTECTION AT PROJECT TRINITY
- 3.1 Organization
- 3.2 Site Monitoring Group
- 3.3 Offsite Monitoring Group
-
- 4 DOSIMETRY ANALYSIS OF PARTICIPANTS IN PROJECT TRINITY
- 4.1 Film Badge Records
- 4.2 Gamma Radiation Exposure
-
- REFERENCE LIST
-
-
-
- LIST OF FIGURES
-
- 1-1 Location of Alamogordo Bombing Range
- 1-2 TRINITY Site and Major Installations
- 1-3 Tent Used as Guard Post at Project TRINITY
- 1-4 Truck Used as Guard Post at Project TRINITY
- 1-5 Organization of Project TRINITY
- 2-1 The TRINITY Shot-tower
- 2-2 The TRINITY Detonation, 0530 Hours, 16 July 1945
- 2-3 The South Shelter (Control Point)
- 2-4 Inside One of the Shelters
- 2-5 The Base Camp, Headquarters for Project TRINITY
- 2-5 The Base Camp, Headquarters for Project TRINITY
- 2-6 Project TRINITY Personnel Wearing Protective Clothing
- 2-7 "JUMBO" after the TRINITY Detonation
-
-
-
- LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS
-
- The following abbreviations and acronyms are used in this volume:
-
- AEC Atomic Energy Commission
- DOD Department of Defense
- LASL Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory
- MAUD [Committee for the] Military Application of Uranium Detonation
- MED Manhattan Engineer District
- R/h roentgens per hour
- UTM Universal Transverse Mercator
-
-
-
- REPORT DOCUMENTATION PAGE
-
-
- SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF THIS PAGE (When Data Entered):
- UNCLASSIFIED
-
- 1. REPORT NUMBER: DNA 6028F
- 2. GOVT ACCESSION NO.:
- 3. RECIPIENT'S CATALOG NUMBER:
- 4. TITLE (and Subtitle): PROJECT TRINITY 1945-1946
- 5. TYPE OF REPORT & PERIOD COVERED: Final Report
- 6. PERFORMING ORG. REPORT NUMBER: JRB 2-816-03-423-00
- 7. AUTHOR(S): Carl Maag, Steve Rorer
- 8. CONTRACT OR GRANT NUMBER(S): DNA 001-79-C-0473
- 9. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME AND ADDRESS:
- JRB Associates
- 8400 Westpark Drive
- McLean, Virginia 22102
- 10. PROGRAM ELEMENT. PROJECT, TASK AREA & WORK UNIT NUMBERS:
- Subtask U99QAXMK506-08
- 11. CONTROLLING OFFICE NAME AND ADDRESS:
- Director
- Defense Nuclear Agency
- Washington, D.C. 20305
- 12. REPORT DATE: 15 December 1982
- 13. NUMBER OF PAGES: 76
- 14. MONITORING AGENCY NAME & ADDRESS(if different from Controlling
- Office):
- 15. SECURITY CLASS. (of this report): UNCLASSIFIED
- 15a. DECLASSIFICATION/DOWNGRADING SCHEDULE: N/A Since UNCLASSIFIED
- 16. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of this Report): Approved for public
- release; distribution unlimited.
- 17. DISTRIBUTION STATEMENT (of the abstract entered In Block 20, If
- different from Report):
- 18. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES: This work was sponsored by the Defense
- Nuclear Agency under RDT&E RMSS Code B350079464 U99QAXMK50608 H2590D.
- For sale by National Technical Information Service, Springfield, VA
- 22161.
-
- The Defense Nuclear Agency Action Officer, Lt. Col. H. L. Reese,
- USAF, under whom this work was done, wishes to acknowledge the
- research and editing contribution of numerous reviewers in the
- military services and other organizations in addition to those writers
- listed in block 7.
-
- 19. KEY WORDS (Continue on reverse side if necessary and Identify by
- block number):
- TRINITY
- Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory
- Alamogordo Bombing Range
- Manhattan Engineer District
- Manhattan Project
- Personnel Dosimetry
- Radiation Exposure
- Nuclear Weapons Testing
- 20. ABSTRACT: This report describes the activities of an estimated
- 1,000 personnel, both military and civilian, in Project TRINITY, which
- culminated in detonation of the first nuclear device, in New Mexico in
- 1945. Scientific and diagnostic experiments to evaluate the effects
- of the nuclear device were the primary activities engaging military
- personnel.
-
-
-
- FACT SHEET
-
-
- Defense Nuclear Agency
- Public Affairs Office
- Washington, D C. 20305
-
- Subject: Project TRINITY
-
- Project TRINITY, conducted by the Manhattan Engineer District (MED),
- was designed to test and assess the effects of a nuclear weapon. The
- TRINITY nuclear device was detonated on a 100-foot tower on the
- Alamogordo Bombing Range in south-central New Mexico at 0530 hours on
- 16 July 1945. The nuclear yield of the detonation was equivalent to
- the energy released by detonating 19 kilotons of TNT. At shot-time,
- the temperature was 21.8 degrees Celsius, and surface air pressure was
- 850 millibars. The winds were nearly calm at the surface; at 10,300
- feet above mean sea level, they were from the southwest at 10 knots.
- The winds blew the cloud resulting from the detonation to the
- northeast. From 16 July 1945 through 1946, about 1,000 military and
- civilian personnel took part in Project TRINITY or visited the test
- site. The location of the test site and its major installations are
- shown in the accompanying figures.
-
-
- Military and Scientific Activities
-
- All participants in Project TRINITY, both military and civilian, were
- under the authority of the MED. No military exercises were conducted.
- The Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory (LASL), which was staffed and
- administered by the University of California (under contract to the
- MED), conducted diagnostic experiments. Civilian and military
- scientists and technicians, with assistance from other military
- personnel, placed gauges, detectors, and other instruments around
- ground zero before the detonation. Four offsite monitoring posts were
- established in the towns of Nogal, Roswell, Socorro, and Fort Sumner,
- New Mexico. An evacuation detachment consisting of 144 to 160
- enlisted men and officers was established in case protective measures
- or evacuation of civilians living offsite became necessary. At least
- 94 of these personnel were from the Provisional Detachment Number 1,
- Company "B," of the 9812th Technical Service Unit, Army Corps of
- Engineers. Military police cleared the test area and recorded the
- locations of all personnel before the detonation.
-
- A radiological monitor was assigned to each of the three shelters,
- which were located to the north, west, and south of ground zero. Soon
- after the detonation, the monitors surveyed the area immediately
- around the shelters and then proceeded out the access road to its
- intersection with the main road, Broadway. Personnel not essential to
- postshot activities were transferred from the west and south shelters
- to the Base Camp, about 16 kilometers southwest of ground zero.
- Personnel at the north shelter were evacuated when a sudden rise in
- radiation levels was detected; it was later learned that the
- instrument had not been accurately calibrated and levels had not
- increased as much as the instrument indicated. Specially designated
- groups conducted onsite and offsite radiological surveys.
-
-
- Safety Standards and Procedures
-
- The safety criteria established for Project TRINITY were based on
- calculations of the anticipated dangers from blast pressure, thermal
- radiation, and ionizing radiation. The TR-7 Group, also known as the
- Medical Group, was responsible for radiological safety. A limit of 5
- roentgens of exposure during a two-month period was established.
-
- The Site and Offsite Monitoring Groups were both part of the Medical
- Group. The Site Monitoring Group was responsible for equipping
- personnel with protective clothing and instruments to measure
- radiation exposure, monitoring and recording personnel exposure
- according to film badge readings and time spent in the test area, and
- providing for personnel decontamination. The Offsite Monitoring Group
- surveyed areas surrounding the test site for radioactive fallout. In
- addition to these two monitoring groups, a small group of medical
- technicians provided radiation detection instruments and monitoring.
-
-
- Radiation Exposures at Project TRINITY
-
- Dosimetry information is available for about 815 individuals who
- either participated in Project TRINITY activities or visited the test
- site between 16 July 1945 and 1 January 1947. The listing does not
- indicate the precise military or unit affiliation of all personnel.
- Less than six percent of the Project TRINITY participants received
- exposures greater than 2 roentgens. Twenty-three of these
- individuals received exposures greater than 2 but less than 4
- roentgens; another 22 individuals received between 4 and 15 roentgens.
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
- From 1945 to 1962, the U.S. Government, through the Manhattan Engineer
- District (MED) and its successor agency, the Atomic Energy Commission
- (AEC), conducted 235 tests of nuclear devices at sites in the United
- States and in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. In all, an estimated
- 220,000 Department of Defense (DOD)* participants, both military and
- civilian, were present at the tests. Project TRINITY, the war-time
- effort to test-fire a nuclear explosive device, was the first
- atmospheric nuclear weapons test.
-
- * The MED, which was part of the Army Corps of Engineers, administered
- the U.S. nuclear testing program until the AEC came into existence in
- 1946. Before DOD was established in 1947, the Army Corps of Engineers
- was under the War Department.
-
- In 1977, 15 years after the last above-ground nuclear weapons test,
- the Centers for Disease Control** noted a possible leukemia cluster
- among a small group of soldiers present at Shot SMOKY, a test of
- Operation PLUMBBOB, the series of atmospheric nuclear weapons tests
- conducted in 1957. Since that initial report by the Centers for
- Disease Control, the Veterans Administration has received a number of
- claims for medical benefits from former military personnel who believe
- their health may have been affected by their participation in the
- weapons testing program.
-
- ** The Centers for Disease Control are part of the U.S. Department of
- Health and Human Services (formerly the U.S. Department of Health,
- Education, and Welfare).
-
- In late 1977, DOD began a study to provide data to both the Centers
- for Disease Control and the Veterans Administration on potential
- exposures to ionizing radiation among the military and civilian
- participants in atmospheric nuclear weapons testing. DOD organized an
- effort to:
-
- o Identify DOD personnel who had taken part in the atmospheric nuclear
- weapons tests
-
- o Determine the extent of the participants' exposure to ionizing
- radiation
-
- o Provide public disclosure of information concerning participation by
- military personnel in Project TRINITY.
-
-
- METHODS AND SOURCES USED TO PREPARE THIS VOLUME
-
- This report on Project TRINITY is based on historical and technical
- documents associated with the detonation of the first nuclear device
- on 16 July 1945. The Department of Defense compiled information for
- this volume from documents that record the scientific activities
- during Project TRINITY. These records, most of which were developed
- by participants in TRINITY, are kept in several document repositories
- throughout the United States.
-
- In compiling information for this report, historians, health
- physicists, radiation specialists, and information analysts canvassed
- document repositories known to contain materials on atmospheric
- nuclear weapons tests conducted in the southwestern United States.
- These repositories included armed services libraries, Government
- agency archives and libraries, Federal repositories, and libraries of
- scientific and technical laboratories. Researchers examined
- classified and unclassified documents containing information on the
- participation of personnel from the MED, which supervised Project
- TRINITY, and from the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory (LASL), which
- developed the TRINITY device. After this initial effort, researchers
- recorded relevant information concerning the activities of MED and
- LASL personnel and catalogued the data sources. Many of the documents
- pertaining specifically to MED and LASL participation were found in
- the Defense Nuclear Agency Technical Library and the LASL Records
- Center.
-
- Information on the fallout pattern, meteorological conditions, and
- nuclear cloud dimensions is taken from Volume 1 of the General
- Electric Company-TEMPO's "Compilation of Local Fallout Data from Test
- Detonations 1945-1962, Extracted from DASA 1251," unless more specific
- information is available elsewhere.
-
-
- ORGANIZATION OF THIS VOLUME
-
- The following chapters detail MED and LASL participation in Project
- TRINITY. Chapter 1 provides background information, including a
- description of the TRINITY test site. Chapter 2 describes the
- activities of MED and LASL participants before, during, and after the
- detonation. Chapter 3 discusses the radiological safety criteria and
- procedures in effect for Project TRINITY, and chapter 4 presents the
- results of the radiation monitoring program, including information on
- film badge readings for participants in the project.
-
- The information in this report is supplemented by the Reference
- Manual: Background Materials for the CONUS Volumes." The manual
- summarizes information on radiation physics, radiation health
- concepts, exposure criteria, and measurement techniques. It also
- lists acronyms and includes a glossary of terms used in the DOD
- reports addressing test events in the continental United States.
-
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 1
-
- INTRODUCTION
-
-
- Project TRINITY was the name given to the war-time effort to produce
- the first nuclear detonation. A plutonium-fueled implosion device was
- detonated on 16 July 1945 at the Alamogordo Bombing Range in
- south-central New Mexico.
-
- Three weeks later, on 6 August, the first uranium-fueled nuclear bomb,
- a gun-type weapon code-named LITTLE BOY, was detonated over the
- Japanese city of Hiroshima. On 9 August, the FAT MAN nuclear bomb, a
- plutonium-fueled implosion weapon identical to the TRINITY device, was
- detonated over another Japanese city, Nagasaki. Two days later, the
- Japanese Government informed the United States of its decision to end
- the war. On 2 September 1945, the Japanese Empire officially
- surrendered to the Allied Governments, bringing World War II to an
- end.
-
- In the years devoted to the development and construction of a nuclear
- weapon, scientists and technicians expanded their knowledge of nuclear
- fission and developed both the gun-type and the implosion mechanisms
- to release the energy of a nuclear chain reaction. Their knowledge,
- however, was only theoretical. They could be certain neither of the
- extent and effects of such a nuclear chain reaction, nor of the
- hazards of the resulting blast and radiation. Protective measures
- could be based only on estimates and calculations. Furthermore,
- scientists were reasonably confident that the gun-type uranium-fueled
- device could be successfully detonated, but they did not know if the
- more complex firing technology required in an implosion device would
- work. Successful detonation of the TRINITY device showed that
- implosion would work, that a nuclear chain reaction would result in a
- powerful detonation, and that effective means exist to guard against
- the blast and radiation produced.
-
-
- 1.1 HISTORICAL BACKGROUND OF PROJECT TRINITY
-
- The development of a nuclear weapon was a low priority for the United
- States before the outbreak of World War II. However, scientists
- exiled from Germany had expressed concern that the Germans were
- developing a nuclear weapon. Confirming these fears, in 1939 the
- Germans stopped all sales of uranium ore from the mines of occupied
- Czechoslovakia. In a letter sponsored by group of concerned
- scientists, Albert Einstein informed President Roosevelt that German
- experiments had shown that an induced nuclear chain reaction was
- possible and could be used to construct extremely powerful bombs (7;
- 12)*.
-
- * All sources cited in the text are listed alphabetically in the
- reference list at the end of this volume. The number given in the
- text corresponds to the number of the source document in the reference
- list.
-
- In response to the potential threat of a German nuclear weapon, the
- United States sought a source of uranium to use in determining the
- feasibility of a nuclear chain reaction. After Germany occupied
- Belgium in May 1940, the Belgians turned over uranium ore from their
- holdings in the Belgian Congo to the United States. Then, in March
- 1941, the element plutonium was isolated, and the plutonium-239
- isotope was found to fission as readily as the scarce uranium isotope,
- uranium-235. The plutonium, produced in a uranium-fueled nuclear
- reactor, provided the United States with an additional source of
- material for nuclear weapons (7; 12).
-
- In the summer of 1941, the British Government published a report
- written by the Committee for Military Application of Uranium
- Detonation (MAUD). This report stated that a nuclear weapon was
- possible and concluded that its construction should begin immediately.
- The MAUD report, and to a lesser degree the discovery of plutonium,
- encouraged American leaders to think more seriously about developing a
- nuclear weapon. On 6 December 1941, President Roosevelt appointed the
- S-1 Committee to determine if the United States could construct a
- nuclear weapon. Six months later, the S-1 Committee gave the
- President its report, recommending a fast-paced program that would
- cost up to $100 million and that might produce the weapon by July 1944
- (12).
-
- The President accepted the S-1 Committee's recommendations. The
- effort to construct the weapon was turned over to the War Department,
- which assigned the task to the Army Corps of Engineers. In September
- 1942, the Corps of Engineers established the Manhattan Engineer
- District to oversee the development of a nuclear weapon. This effort
- was code-named the "Manhattan Project" (12).
-
- Within the next two years, the MED built laboratories and production
- plants throughout the United States. The three principal centers of
- the Manhattan Project were the Hanford, Washington, Plutonium
- Production Plant; the Oak Ridge, Tennessee, U-235 Production Plant;
- and the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory in northern New Mexico. At
- LASL, Manhattan Project scientists and technicians, directed by Dr. J.
- Robert Oppenheimer,* investigated the theoretical problems that had to
- be solved before a nuclear weapon could be developed (12).
-
- * This report identifies by name only those LASL and MED personnel who
- are well-known historical figures.
-
- During the first two years of the Manhattan Project, work proceeded at
- a slow but steady pace. Significant technical problems had to be
- solved, and difficulties in the production of plutonium, particularly
- the inability to process large amounts, often frustrated the
- scientists. Nonetheless, by 1944 sufficient progress had been made to
- persuade the scientists that their efforts might succeed. A test of
- the plutonium implosion device was necessary to determine if it would
- work and what its effects would be. In addition, the scientists were
- concerned about the possible effects if the conventional explosives in
- a nuclear device, particularly the more complex implosion-type device,
- failed to trigger the nuclear reaction when detonated over enemy
- territory. Not only would the psychological impact of the weapon be
- lost, but the enemy might recover large amounts of fissionable
- material.
-
- In March 1944, planning began to test-fire a plutonium-fueled
- implosion device. At LASL, an organization designated the X-2 Group
- was formed within the Explosives Division. Its duties were "to make
- preparations for a field test in which blast, earth shock, neutron and
- gamma radiation would be studied and complete photographic records
- made of the explosion and any atmospheric phenomena connected with the
- explosion" (13). Dr. Oppenheimer chose the name TRINITY for the
- project in September 1944 (12).
-
-
- 1.2 THE PROJECT TRINITY SITE
-
- The TRINITY site was chosen by Manhattan Project scientists after
- thorough study of eight different sites. The site selected was an
- area measuring 29 by 39 kilometers* in the northwest corner of the
- Alamogordo Bombing Range. The Alamogordo Bombing Range was located in
- a desert in south-central New Mexico called the Jornada del Muerto
- ("Journey of Death"). Figure 1-1 shows the location of the bombing
- range. The site was chosen for its remote location and good weather
- and because it was already owned by the Government. MED obtained
- permission to use the site from the Commanding General of the Second
- Air Force (Army Air Forces) on 7 September 1944 (12). Figure 1-2
- shows the TRINITY site with its major installations.
-
- * Throughout this report, surface distances are given in metric units.
- The metric conversion factors include: 1 meter = 3.28 feet; 1 meter =
- 1.09 yards; and 1 kilometer = 0.62 miles. Vertical distances are
- given in feet; altitudes are measured from mean sea level, while
- heights are measured from surface level, unless otherwise noted.
-
- Ground zero for the TRINITY detonation was at UTM coordinates
- 630266.** Three shelters, located approximately 9,150 meters (10,000
- yards) north, west, and south of ground zero, were built for the
- protection of test personnel and instruments. The shelters had walls
- of reinforced concrete and were buried under a few feet of earth. The
- south shelter was the Control Point for the test (12). The Base Camp,
- which was the headquarters for Project TRINITY, was located
- approximately 16 kilometers southwest of ground zero. The principal
- buildings of the abandoned McDonald Ranch, where the active parts of
- the TRINITY device were assembled, stood 3,660 meters southeast of
- ground zero. Seven guard posts, which were simply small tents or
- parked trucks like the ones shown in figures 1-3 and 1-4, dotted the
- test site (9).
-
- ** Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) coordinates are used in this
- report. The first three digits refer to a point on an east- west
- axis, and the second three digits refer to a point on a north-south
- axis. The point so designated is the southwest corner of an area 100
- meters square.
-
-
- 1.3 THE PROJECT TRINITY ORGANIZATION
-
- The organization that planned and conducted Project TRINITY grew out
- of the X-2 Group. LASL, though administered by the University of
- California, was part of the Manhattan Project, supervised by the Army
- Corps of Engineers Manhattan Engineer District. The chief of MED was
- Maj. Gen. Leslie Groves of the Army Corps of Engineers. Major General
- Groves reported to both the Chief of Engineers and the Army Chief of
- Staff. The Army Chief of Staff reported to the Secretary of War, a
- Cabinet officer directly responsible to the President. Figure 1-5
- outlines the organization of Project TRINITY.
-
- The director of the Project TRINITY organization was Dr. Kenneth
- Bainbridge. Dr. Bainbridge reported to Dr. J. Robert Oppenheimer, the
- director of LASL. A team of nine research consultants advised Dr.
- Bainbridge on scientific and technical matters (3).
-
- The Project TRINITY organization was divided into the following
- groups (3):
-
- o The TRINITY Assembly Group, responsible for assembling and arming
- the nuclear device
-
- o The TR-1 (Services) Group, responsible for construction, utilities,
- procurement, transportation, and communications
-
- o The TR-2 Group, responsible for air-blast and earth-shock measurements
-
- o The TR-3 (Physics) Group, responsible for experiments concerning
- measurements of ionizing radiation
-
- o The TR-4 Group, responsible for meteorology
-
- o The TR-5 Group, responsible for spectrographic and photographic
- measurements
-
- o The TR-6 Group, responsible for the airblast-airborne condenser
- gauges
-
- o The TR-7 (Medical) Group, responsible for the radiological safety
- and general health of the Project TRINITY participants.
-
- Each of these groups was divided into several units. Individuals were
- also assigned special tasks outside their groups, such as
- communications and tracking the TRINITY cloud with a searchlight (3).
-
-
- 1.4 MILITARY AND CIVILIAN PARTICIPANTS IN PROJECT TRINITY
-
- From March 1944 until the beginning of 1946, several thousand people
- participated in Project TRINITY. These included not only the LASL
- scientists, but also scientists, technicians, and workmen employed at
- MED installations throughout the United States. According to entrance
- logs, film badge data, and other records, about 1,000 people either
- worked at or visited the TRINITY site from 16 July 1945 through 1946
- (1; 3; 8; 15; 16).
-
- Although supervised by Major General Groves and the Army Corps of
- Engineers, many Manhattan Project personnel were civilians. Military
- personnel were assigned principally to support services, such as
- security and logistics, although soldiers with special skills worked
- with the civilians (7; 12). Most of the military personnel were part
- of the Army Corps of Engineers, although Navy and other Army personnel
- were also assigned to the project (4; 12).
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 2
-
- THE ACTIVITIES AT PROJECT TRINITY
-
-
- The TRINITY nuclear device was detonated on a 100-foot tower (shown in
- figure 2-1) at UTM coordinates 630266 on the Alamogordo Bombing Range,
- New Mexico, at 0530 Mountain War Time, on 16 July 1945. The
- detonation had a yield of 19 kilotons and left an impression 2.9
- meters deep and 335 meters wide. The cloud resulting from the
- detonation rose to an altitude of 35,000 feet (5). The TRINITY
- detonation is shown in figure 2-2.
-
- At shot-time, the temperature was 21.8 degrees Celsius, and the
- surface air pressure was 850 millibars. Winds at shot-time were
- nearly calm at the surface but attained a speed of 10 knots from the
- southwest at 10,300 feet. At 34,600 feet, the wind speed was 23 knots
- from the southwest. The winds blew the cloud to the northeast (5).
-
-
- 2.1 PRESHOT ACTIVITIES
-
- Construction of test site facilities on the Alamogordo Bombing Range
- began in December 1944. The first contingent of personnel, 12
- military policemen, arrived just before Christmas. The number of
- personnel at the test site gradually increased until the peak level of
- about 325 was reached the week before the detonation (2; 12).
-
- On 7 May 1945 at 0437 hours, 200 LASL scientists and technicians
- exploded 100 tons of conventional high explosives at the test site.
- The explosives were stacked on top of a 20-foot tower and contained
- tubes of radioactive solution to simulate, at a low level of activity,
- the radioactive products expected from a nuclear explosion. The test
- produced a bright sphere which spread out in an oval form. A column
- of smoke and debris rose as high as 15,000 feet before drifting
- eastward. The explosion left a shallow crater 1.5 meters deep and 9
- meters wide. Monitoring in the area revealed a level of radioactivity
- low enough to allow workers to spend several hours in the area (3;
- 12).
-
- The planned firing date for the TRINITY device was 4 July 1945. On 14
- June 1945, Dr. Oppenheimer changed the test date to no earlier than 13
- July and no later than 23 July. On 30 June, the earliest firing date
- was moved to 16 July, even though better weather was forecast for 18
- and 19 July. Because the Allied conference in Potsdam, Germany, was
- about to begin and the President needed the results of the test as
- soon as possible, the TRINITY test organization adjusted its schedules
- accordingly and set shot-time at 0400 hours on 16 July (3; 12; 14).
-
- The final preparations for the detonation started at 2200 on 15 July.
- To prevent unnecessary danger, all personnel not essential to the
- firing activities were ordered to leave the test site. During the
- night of 15 July, these people left for viewing positions on Compania
- Hill,* 32 kilometers northwest of ground zero. They were joined by
- several spectators from LASL (3; 12).
-
- * "Compania" also appears as "Compana," "Campagne," or "Compagna" in
- various sources.
-
- Project personnel not required to check instruments within the ground
- zero area stationed themselves in the three shelters or at other
- assigned locations. The military police at Guard Posts 1, 2, and 4
- blocked off all roads leading into the test site, and the men at Guard
- Post 8, the only access to the ground zero area from the Base Camp,
- ensured that no unauthorized individuals entered the area (9; 12).
-
- At 0100 hours on 16 July, military policemen from Guard Posts 3, 5, 6,
- and 7 met to compare their logs of personnel authorized to be in the
- ground zero area. The guards then traveled along the access roads to
- clear out all project personnel. As individuals left for their
- assigned shelters or stations, their departures from the test area
- were recorded in the military police logs. By 0200 the area sweep was
- completed, and the military police went to their shelters and
- stations. A final check of personnel was made in each shelter (3; 9;
- 12).
-
- At the time of detonation, 99 project personnel were in the three
- shelters: 29 in the north shelter, 37 in the west shelter, and 33 in
- the south shelter. Dr. Oppenheimer, Dr. Bainbridge, and other key
- personnel awaited the firing at the south shelter, which served as the
- Control Point. Figure 2-3 shows the exterior of the south shelter;
- figure 2-4 gives an interior view of one of the shelters, most likely
- the south. Although most of the shelter occupants were civilians, at
- least 23 military participants were spread among the three shelters
- (1; 12).
-
- The remainder of the test site personnel were positioned at the Base
- Camp 16 kilometers south-southwest of ground zero, or on Compania
- Hill, or at the guard posts. Important Government officials, such as
- General Groves and Dr. Vannevar Bush, Director of the U.S. Office of
- Scientific Research and Development, viewed the detonation from a
- trench at the Base Camp. The Base Camp is depicted in figure 2-5.
-
- The military police of Guard Posts 1 and 2 were instructed to be in
- foxholes approximately five kilometers west and north, respectively,
- from their posts. The military police of Guard Posts 3 and 4 were
- instructed to be in foxholes south of Mockingbird Gap. A radiological
- safety monitor was assigned to the group from Guard Post 4. Guard Post
- 5 personnel were to be in the south shelter, Guard Post 6 personnel in
- the west shelter, and Guard Post 7 personnel in the north shelter.
- The military police of Guard Post 8 remained at that post, 400 meters
- east of the Base Camp (9).
-
- An evacuation detachment of between 144 and 160 officers and enlisted
- men was stationed near Guard Post 2, about 14 kilometers northwest of
- ground zero. These men were on standby in case ranches and towns
- beyond the test site had to be evacuated. Five radiological safety
- monitors were assigned to this detachment. Ninety-four men of the
- evacuation detachment belonged to Provisional Detachment Number 1,
- Company "B," of the 9812th Technical Service Unit, Army Corps of
- Engineers, from LASL. The identity of the remaining evacuation
- personnel has not been documented (3; 4; 8; 10; 15).
-
- With the exception of the shelter occupants (99 personnel) and
- evacuation detachment (between 144 and 160 men), the number of
- personnel at the test site at the time of detonation has not been
- documented. Film badge records show that approximately 355 people
- were at the test site at some time during 16 July. The shelter
- occupants and 44 men of the evacuation detachment are on this list.
- It has not been possible to pinpoint the location of many of the
- remaining personnel. Some were at the Base Camp or on Compania Hill.
- Since many of these people returned to the test site after shot-time
- to work on experiments, their film badges registered exposures from
- residual radioactivity on 16 July. Based on the documented personnel
- totals, at least the following 263 individuals were at the test site
- when the device was detonated (1; 4; 8-10; 13; 15):
-
- o 99 shelter occupants at shelters 9,150 meters north, south, and west
- of ground zero
-
- o 144 to 160 officers and enlisted men of the evacuation detachment,
- located 14 kilometers northwest of ground zero near Guard Post 2
-
- o Five radiological safety monitors assigned to the evacuation
- detachment to perform offsite monitoring of nearby towns and
- residences
-
- o One radiological safety monitor assigned to Guard Post 4
-
- o Two military policemen at each of the seven guard posts (indicated
- by photographs such as figures 1-3 and 1-4).
-
-
- 2.2 DETONATION AND POSTSHOT ACTIVITIES
-
- Because of bad weather, the Project TRINITY director (Dr. Bainbridge)
- delayed the detonation, which had been scheduled for 0400 hours. By
- 0445, however, the forecast was better, and shot-time was set for
- 0530. This gave the scientists 45 minutes to arm the device and
- prepare the instruments in the shelters. The final countdown began at
- 0510, and the device was detonated at 0529:45 Mountain War Time from
- the Control Point in the south shelter (3; 12).
-
- No one was closer than 9,150 meters to ground zero at the time of the
- detonation. With the exception of a few men holding the ropes of
- barrage balloons or guiding cameras to follow the fireball as it
- ascended, all shelter personnel were in or behind the shelters. Some
- left the shelters after the initial flash to view the fireball. As a
- precautionary measure, they had been advised to lie on the ground
- before the blast wave arrived. Project personnel located beyond the
- shelters, such as at the Base Camp and on Compania Hill, were also
- instructed to lie on the ground or in a depression until the blast
- wave had passed (1). However, the blast wave at these locations was
- not as strong as had been expected.
-
- In order to prevent eye damage, Dr. Bainbridge ordered the
- distribution of welder's filter glass. Because it was not known
- exactly how the flash might affect eyesight, it was suggested that
- direct viewing of the fireball not be attempted even with this
- protection. The recommended procedure was to face away from ground
- zero and watch the hills or sky until the fireball illuminated the
- area. Then, after the initial flash had passed, one could turn around
- and view the fireball through the filter glass. Despite these
- well-publicized instructions, two participants did not take
- precautions. They were temporarily blinded by the intense flash but
- experienced no permanent vision impairment (1; 17).
-
- People as far away as Santa Fe and El Paso saw the brilliant light of
- the detonation. Windows rattled in the areas immediately surrounding
- the test site, waking sleeping ranchers and townspeople. To dispel
- any rumors that might compromise the security of Project TRINITY, the
- Government announced that an Army munitions dump had exploded.
- However, immediately after the destruction of Hiroshima, the
- Government revealed to the public what had actually occurred in the
- New Mexico desert (12; 13).
-
- Immediately after the shot, Medical Group personnel began the
- radiological monitoring activities described in section 3.1.2. At
- 0815, when most of the monitoring activities were completed,
- preparations began for entrance into the ground zero area. To
- regulate entry into the area, a "Going-in Board" was established,
- consisting of Dr. Bainbridge, the Chief of the Medical Group, and a
- special scientific consultant. Its purpose was to determine whether a
- party had a valid reason for entering the ground zero area. The board
- functioned for three days.
-
- Military police at Guard Post 4 and at three roadblocks set up along
- Broadway controlled entry into the area. Guard Posts 3, 5, 6, and 7
- were within 3,000 meters of ground zero and thus remained unmanned.
- At the south shelter, the Medical Group set up a "going-in" station
- where personnel were required to stop to put on protective clothing
- (coveralls, booties, caps, and cotton gloves) and pick up monitoring
- equipment before entering the ground zero area. Since it was not
- known how much radioactive material might be suspended in the air, all
- personnel entering the ground zero area wore complete protective
- covering and respirators for the first three days after the
- detonation. Figure 2-6 shows two Project TRINITY personnel wearing
- protective clothing (1).
-
- On the day of the shot, five parties entered the ground zero area.
- One party consisted of eight members of the earth-sampling group.
- They obtained samples by driving to within 460 meters of ground zero
- in a tank specially fitted with rockets to which retrievable
- collectors were fastened in order to gather soil samples from a
- distance. This group made several sampling excursions on 16 and 17
- July. The tank carried two personnel (a driver and a passenger) each
- trip. No member of this party received a radiation exposure of more
- than 1 roentgen (1).
-
- Five other men from the earth-sampling group entered the ground zero
- area in a second tank, lined with lead for radiation protection. The
- tank, carrying the driver and one passenger, made five trips into the
- ground zero area to retrieve soil samples on 16 and 17 July. On two
- trips, the tank passed over ground zero; on the others, it approached
- to within about 90 meters of ground zero. The men scooped up soil
- samples through a trap door in the bottom of the tank. One driver who
- made three trips into the ground zero area received the highest
- exposure, 15 roentgens (1).
-
- This lead-lined tank was also used by ten men to observe the radiation
- area. These men, traveling two at a time, made five trips into the
- area on shot-day but never approached closer than 1,370 meters to
- ground zero. The highest exposure among these ten men was 0.3
- roentgens (1).
-
- The next party to approach ground zero consisted of a photographer and
- a radiological safety monitor. Wearing protective clothing and
- respirators, the two men were about 730 meters northwest of ground
- zero photographing "JUMBO" from 1100 to 1200 hours. "JUMBO," shown in
- figure 2-7, was a massive container built to contain the
- high-explosive detonation of the TRINITY device and to allow recovery
- of the fissionable material if the device failed to produce a nuclear
- detonation. The plan to use "JUMBO," however, was abandoned when the
- scientists concluded that a fairly large nuclear explosion was
- certain. The container remained on the ground near the shot-tower
- during the detonation. Both the photographer and the monitor received
- an estimated radiation exposure between 0.5 and 1 roentgen (1; 7).
-
- The last party to "go in" on shot-day consisted of six men retrieving
- neutron detectors. They entered the test area at 1430 hours. Three
- of the men went to a point 730 meters south of ground zero to pull out
- cables carrying neutron detectors located 550 meters south of ground
- zero. The group wore protective clothing and respirators and spent
- about 30 minutes in the area. The remaining three men drove as close
- as 320 meters southwest of ground zero to retrieve neutron detectors.
- They got out of their vehicle only once, at about 460 meters from
- ground zero, and spent a total of about ten minutes making this trip
- through the area. Each man's radiation exposure measured less than 1
- roentgen (1).
-
- Most of the soldiers of the evacuation detachment remained in their
- bivouac area near Guard Post 2. According to a report written by the
- detachment commander, a reinforced platoon was sent to the town of
- Bingham, about 29 kilometers northeast of the test site, while offsite
- radiological safety monitors surveyed the area. The evacuation
- detachment was dismissed at 1300 hours on shot-day when it became
- evident from offsite monitoring that evacuations would not be
- undertaken. The detachment returned to LASL at 0400 on 17 July (15).
-
- Two B-29 aircraft from Kirtland Field, Albuquerque, New Mexico,
- participated in post-shot events. Their planned mission was to pass
- over the test area shortly before the explosion to simulate a bomb
- drop. After the TRINITY device had been detonated, the aircraft would
- circle near ground zero, while the men onboard would measure the
- atmospheric effects of the nuclear explosion. This would enable them
- to determine whether a delivery aircraft would be endangered.
- However, because of bad weather on shot-day, Dr. Oppenheimer canceled
- the aircraft's flight in the ground zero area. Instead, the two
- B-29s, each with 12 men onboard, flew along the perimeter of the
- bombing range and observed the shot from a distance of 19 to 29
- kilometers. Among those observers was a Navy captain who was also the
- MED Chief of Ordnance (6; 12; 13).
-
-
- 2.3 ACTIVITIES AFTER 16 JULY 1945
-
- On 17, 18, and 19 July, all personnel and visitors had to receive
- permission to approach ground zero from the "Going-in Board." On
- these three days, 21 groups were authorized to go beyond the Broadway
- roadblocks. Most of those who sought this authorization were
- scientists and military support personnel whose job required that they
- work near ground zero. Except for a group of two military men and
- three civilians who went to ground zero on 16 and 17 July and a group
- of two civilians who approached as close as 90 meters on 18 July, the
- reentry personnel came no closer than 180 meters to ground zero. Of
- these personnel, the individual who received the highest exposure
- during the three days was an Army sergeant who received 15 roentgens.
- During the same period, two civilians received 10 roentgens and 7.5
- roentgens, respectively. All other personnel received exposures of 5
- roentgens or less (1; 3).
-
- After the "Going-In Board" was disbanded on 19 July, permission to
- enter the ground zero area had to be obtained from Dr. Bainbridge or
- one of his deputies. Many scientists entered the ground zero area
- after 19 July to retrieve instruments or to perform experiments. The
- population of the TRINITY test site was diminishing, however, as the
- emphasis shifted to preparing the devices that were to be dropped on
- Japan (1).
-
- On 23 July, a week after the shot, chain barricades with prominent
- signs warning against trespassing were placed 910 meters north, south,
- and west of ground zero. These barricades were supplemented with two
- concentric circles of red flags 1,830 and 2,740 meters from ground
- zero. Except during bad weather, the entire ground zero area was
- visible from the roadblocks. No unauthorized person was ever detected
- entering the ground zero area (1).
-
- On 10 August, the Broadway roadblocks were removed, and mounted
- military policemen began patrolling around ground zero at a distance
- of 730 meters. Each guard was assigned to a daily six-hour shift for
- a period of two weeks; in the third week, the guard was assigned tasks
- away from the ground zero area. The mounted guards and their horses
- wore film badges. No exposure greater than 0.1 roentgen was
- registered. On 1 September, the mounted patrol moved to a distance of
- 460 meters from ground zero, just outside a fence installed a week
- earlier to seal off the area. The same rotating patrol schedule was
- used. The guards' film badge readings showed an average daily
- exposure of 0.02 roentgens. The mounted patrol at the fence continued
- until early 1947 (1).
-
- Between 20 July 1945 and 21 November 1945, 67 groups entered the
- ground zero area. Most of these parties entered in the month after
- shot-day. These were the scientists and technicians conducting
- experiments or retrieving data. By the beginning of September, most
- of those who entered the ground zero area were invited guests (1).
-
- Also during the period 20 July through 21 November, at least 71
- soldiers were at the TRINITY test site. Twenty-five of these men were
- support personnel who never went within 460 meters of ground zero.
- The remaining 46 men were technical personnel, laborers who erected
- the 460-meter fence, or military policemen who served as guides.
- Eleven of these men, probably members of the fence detail, spent
- several days at about 460 meters from ground zero. Working three to
- five hours per day between 9 August and 25 August, they would have
- been the only group to stay longer than one hour in the ground zero
- area. Of the remaining personnel who approached within 460 meters
- from ground zero, 25 spent 15 minutes and ten spent between 30 minutes
- and one hour in the ground zero area. Only 11 people received
- exposures of 3 to 5 roentgens between 20 July and 21 November. Most
- received less than 1 roentgen. After 21 November 1945, no one
- approached closer than the fence which was 460 meters from ground
- zero, although about 200 civilian and military personnel worked at or
- visited the TRINITY site through 1946 (1; 16).
-
- According to dosimetry data, entrance logs, and other records, about
- 1,000 individuals were at the test site at some time between 16 July
- 1945 and the end of 1946. This number includes not only the
- scientists, technicians, and military personnel who were part of
- Project TRINITY but also many visitors. Some of the scientists took
- their wives and children on a tour of the area near ground zero,
- particularly to view the green glass called "trinitite," which covered
- the crater floor. Trinitite was the product of the detonation's
- extreme beat, which melted and mixed desert sand, tower steel, and
- other debris (1; 8; 9; 16).
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 3
-
- RADIATION PROTECTION AT PROJECT TRINITY
-
-
- The TR-7 or Medical Group, shown in the figure 1-5 organizational
- chart, was responsible for radiological safety at Project TRINITY.
- Many of the physicians and scientists in the Medical Group had worked
- with radioactive materials before and were trained in radiological
- safety procedures. The Chief of the Medical Group supervised the
- radiological safety operations and reported to the TRINITY director.
- In addition to providing medical care to TRINITY personnel, this group
- established radiological safety programs to:
-
- o Minimize radiation exposure of personnel on the test site and in
- offsite areas
-
- o Provide monitors to conduct radiological surveys onsite and offsite
-
- o Provide and maintain radiation detection instruments
-
- o Provide protective clothing and equipment.
-
- An exposure limit of 5 roentgens during a two-month period was
- established. Personnel were provided with radiation detection
- instruments to determine their exposures (1).
-
-
- 3.1 ORGANIZATION
-
- The Medical Group consisted of physicians, scientists, and
- administrators, as well as radiological monitors. Many of these
- personnel were nonmilitary, but all worked on the Manhattan Project
- under the administration of the Army Corps of Engineers Manhattan
- Engineer District.
-
- The Medical Group was divided into two monitoring groups, the Site
- Monitoring Group, which was responsible for onsite monitoring, and the
- Offsite Monitoring Group. Each reported to the Chief of the Medical
- Group, and each communicated with the other during the monitoring
- activities. In addition to these two groups, a small group of medical
- technicians provided radiation detection instruments to Medical Group
- personnel (1; 10).
-
-
- 3.2 SITE MONITORING GROUP
-
- The Site Monitoring Group consisted of a chief monitor, three other
- monitors, and several medical doctors. This group had the following
- functions (1; 10):
-
- o Conduct ground surveys of the test area and mark areas of
- radioactivity
-
- o Conduct surveys of the Base Camp and roads leading into the test
- area
-
- o Provide protective clothing and equipment, including film badges and
- pocket dosimeters, to personnel
-
- o Monitor all personnel for radioactive contamination and provide for
- their decontamination
-
- o Maintain a record of radiation exposures received by personnel.
-
- The Site Monitoring Group monitored the radiation exposures of
- personnel in the test area. The time spent by personnel in radiation
- areas was limited, and radiation detection instruments were provided
- to permit continuous monitoring of exposure rates. In many cases, a
- monitor from the Site Monitoring Group accompanied project personnel
- into the test area to monitor exposure rates (1; 10).
-
- Two members of the Site Monitoring Group, a monitor and a physician
- with radiological safety training, were assigned to each shelter. The
- supervising monitor was stationed at the Base Camp and was in radio
- and telephone communication with all three shelters and the offsite
- ground and aerial survey teams. Before any personnel were allowed to
- leave the shelter areas, a radiological safety monitor and a military
- policeman from each shelter advanced along the roads to Broadway to
- check radiation levels. They wore respirators to prevent them from
- inhaling radioactive material (1; 10).
-
- Since it was expected that any dust from the cloud would fall on one
- of the shelter areas within 30 minutes of the shot, plans had been
- made to evacuate personnel as soon as the monitors completed their
- initial survey. Because the cloud moved to the northeast, the south
- shelter (the Control Point) was not completely evacuated, although
- nonessential personnel were sent to the Base Camp. The west shelter
- was emptied of all personnel except a searchlight crew spotlighting
- the cloud as it moved away (1; 10).
-
- Only at the north shelter did an emergency evacuation occur. About 12
- minutes after the shot, a detection instrument indicated a rapid rise
- in the radiation levels within the shelter. At the same time, a
- remote ionization monitoring device detected a rapid increase in
- radiation. Because of these two readings, all north shelter personnel
- were immediately evacuated to the Base Camp, 25 kilometers to the
- south. Film badges worn by personnel stationed at the north shelter,
- however, showed no radiation exposure above the detectable level. It
- was later discovered that the meter of the detector in the north
- shelter had not retained its zero calibration setting, and radiation
- at the north shelter had not reached levels high enough to result in
- measurable exposures of the personnel who had been positioned there.
- However, fallout activity was later detected in the north shelter
- area, proof that part of the cloud did head in that direction. This
- also explains why the monitoring device detected rising radiation
- levels (1; 12).
-
- After ascertaining that radiation levels along the roads leading from
- the shelters to Broadway were within acceptable limits, the
- radiological safety monitors and military police established
- roadblocks at important intersections leading to ground zero. The
- north shelter monitor and military police set up a post where the
- North Shelter Road ran into Broadway. The west shelter monitor and a
- military policeman blocked Vatican Road where it intersected Broadway.
- The south shelter monitor and military police set up a roadblock where
- Broadway intersected Pennsylvania Avenue (1).
-
- The monitor assigned to Guard Post 4 surveyed the Mockingbird Gap area
- to ensure that it was safe for the guards to return to their post.
- This position controlled access to the McDonald Ranch Road, which led
- directly to ground zero (1).
-
- At 0540 hours, the chief monitor departed from the Base Camp with a
- military policeman to monitor the entire length of Broadway. They
- first checked the roadblock at Pennsylvania Avenue and Broadway. Next
- they drove to the roadblock at Vatican Road and Broadway. Upon the
- chief monitor's arrival, the west shelter monitor traveled about nine
- kilometers west on Vatican Road to monitor Guard Post 1 so that the
- military police could reoccupy the post. The monitoring excursion to
- Guard Post 1 continued until the chief monitor had returned from Guard
- Post 2, located 17 kilometers northwest of the Vatican Road roadblock
- on Broadway (1; 18).
-
- The chief monitor arrived at Guard Post 2 at about 0550 hours and
- found the post empty. He then continued five kilometers north along
- Broadway to the foxholes from which the military police had watched
- the detonation. There he found the guards, the five radiological
- safety monitors assigned to the evacuation detachment, and the
- Commanding Officer of the evacuation detachment (1; 18).
-
- The military policemen refused to return to Guard Post 2, insisting
- that they had received orders over their two-way radio from the Base
- Commander to evacuate their post and head for San Antonio, New Mexico,
- a town 28 kilometers northwest of the Guard Post. The Base Commander
- had noted that portions of the cloud were heading northwestward and,
- fearing that fallout from the cloud would contaminate Guard Post 2,
- had ordered the military police to evacuate. The chief monitor,
- however, had found no significant radiation levels anywhere along the
- northern part of Broadway nor around Guard Post 2. The Base Commander,
- after being contacted by the chief monitor, drove to the foxholes and
- ordered the guards to return to their post. This was the only
- unplanned incident during the onsite monitoring (1).
-
- After Guard Post 2 was reoccupied, the chief monitor returned to the
- roadblock at the intersection of Broadway and the North Shelter Road.
- The north shelter monitor informed the chief monitor of the sudden
- evacuation of the north shelter, whereupon the chief monitor surveyed
- the north shelter area and found intensities of only 0.01 and 0.02
- roentgens per hour (R/h). The chief monitor then contacted the south
- shelter and informed Dr. Bainbridge that the north shelter region was
- safe for those who needed to return, that Broadway was safe from the
- Base Camp to Guard Post 2, and that Guard Post 2 was now manned so
- that personnel leaving for LASL could be checked out (1).
-
- The chief monitor then returned to the south shelter and assembled the
- monitors from the three roadblocks and Guard Post 4 to prepare for
- entrance into the ground zero area. The time was about 0815 hours.
- The military police at the roadblocks were given radiation meters to
- survey the adjoining area. Broadway from the south shelter to Guard
- Post 2 was remonitored occasionally to reassure the military police
- that there was no radiation problem. Monitors also surveyed the Base
- Camp for 24 hours after the detonation. No radiation above background
- levels was detected there (1).
-
- The following brief description of the radiological environment in the
- TRINITY test area is based primarily on the results of the remote
- gamma recorders situated in the test area and on results of the road
- surveys conducted after the detonation (1).
-
- Within about 1,400 meters of ground zero (except to the north),
- radiation intensities between 0.2 and 1.3 R/h were detected during the
- first few minutes after the detonation. These readings decreased to
- less than 0.1 R/h within a few hours. At greater distances to the
- east, south, and west, radiation levels above background were not
- detected (1).
-
- The cloud drifted to the northeast, and higher gamma readings due to
- fallout were encountered in this direction. About five minutes after
- the detonation, a reading of 3 R/h was recorded 1,400 meters north of
- ground zero. Several minutes later, the intensity there had increased
- to greater than 7 R/h, and it continued to increase for several more
- minutes. Gamma detectors 9,150 meters north of ground zero, however,
- recorded no radiation above background levels. This indicated that
- the cloud had passed over or near the 1,400-meter area and only
- partially over the 9,150-meter area where the north shelter was
- located. Subsequent ground surveys of this area found no gamma
- intensities higher than 0.02 R/h (1).
-
- Gamma radiation levels at and around ground zero were much higher than
- in other onsite areas because of induced activity in the soil.
- Twenty-four hours after the detonation, the gamma intensity at ground
- zero was estimated to be 600 to 700 R/h. This estimate was based on
- data provided by the tank crew that drove to ground zero to obtain
- soil samples. The intensity decreased to about 2 R/h at 725 meters
- from ground zero. Gamma intensities of 0.1 R/h or more were confined
- within a circular area extending about 1,100 meters from ground zero
- (except in areas of fallout). One week after the shot, the gamma
- intensity at ground zero was about 45 R/h. After 30 days, intensities
- at ground zero had decreased to 15 R/h, and intensities of 0.1 R/h or
- more were not encountered beyond about 365 meters from ground zero.
- Gamma intensities of 3 to 10 R/h were found at ground zero three
- months after the detonation (1; 19).
-
-
- 3.3 OFFSITE MONITORING GROUP
-
- Four two-man teams and one five-man team supervised by the chief
- offsite monitor constituted the Offsite Monitoring Group. Before the
- detonation, the four two-man teams established monitoring posts in
- towns outside the test area. These towns were Nogal, Roswell, Fort
- Sumner, and Socorro, all in New Mexico. The five-man team remained at
- Guard Post 2 to assist in evacuation of nearby residences if the
- TRINITY cloud drifted in that direction. These residences, the Fite
- house and the homes in the town of Tokay, were 24 and 32 kilometers
- northwest of ground zero, respectively. Since the cloud drifted to
- the northeast, evacuation was not required. All offsite monitoring
- teams were in radio or telephone contact with personnel at the Base
- Camp (11).
-
- Offsite monitoring teams in areas northeast of ground zero encountered
- gamma readings ranging from 1.5 to 15 R/h two to four hours after the
- detonation. Three hours after the detonation, surveys taken in
- Bingham, New Mexico (located 30 kilometers northeast of ground zero)
- found gamma intensities of about 1.5 R/h. Radiation readings at the
- town of White, nine kilometers southeast of Bingham, were 6.5 R/h
- three hours after the detonation and 2.5 R/h two hours later. Another
- team monitoring in a canyon 11 kilometers east of Bingham found a
- gamma intensity of about 15 R/h. Five hours later, the intensity had
- decreased to 3.8 R/h. It was estimated that peak intensities of gamma
- radiation from fallout on shot-day were about 7 R/h at an occupied
- ranch house in this canyon area (1; 11; 19).
-
- Monitoring teams resurveyed these towns about one month after the
- TRINITY detonation. At Bingham, gamma readings of 0.003 R/h and
- 0.0001 R/h were found at ground level outdoors and at waist level
- inside a building, respectively. At the town of White, the highest
- outdoor gamma reading was 0.008 R/h. Inside a building, the highest
- reading was 0.0005 R/h (11).
-
- Surveys taken in the canyon area one month after the detonation
- indicated that gamma intensities at ground level had decreased to
- 0.032 R/h. The occupied ranch house was also surveyed, both inside
- and outside. The highest reading outdoors was 0.028 R/h, and the
- highest reading indoors was 0.004 R/h (11; 19).
-
- Monitoring was also conducted in offsite areas other than those to the
- north and northeast of ground zero. Monitors found no radiation
- readings above background levels (11).
-
- Significant fallout from the TRINITY cloud did not reach the ground
- within about 20 kilometers northeast of ground zero. From this point,
- the fallout pattern extended out 160 kilometers and was 48 kilometers
- wide. Gamma intensities up to 15 R/h were measured in this region
- several hours after the detonation. One month later, intensities had
- declined to 0.032 R/h or less (11).
-
-
-
- CHAPTER 4
-
- DOSIMETRY ANALYSIS OF PARTICIPANTS IN PROJECT TRINITY
-
-
- This chapter summarizes the radiation doses received by participants
- in various activities during Project TRINITY. The sources of this
- dosimetry information are the safety and monitoring report for
- personnel at TRINITY, which includes a compilation of film badge
- readings for all participants up to 1 January 1946, and film badge
- data from the records of the Reynolds Electrical and Engineering
- Company, which contain readings through 1946 (1; 16). These sources
- list individual participants with their cumulative gamma radiation
- exposures.
-
-
- 4.1 FILM BADGE RECORDS
-
- During TRINITY, the film badge was the primary device used to measure
- the radiation dose received by individual participants. The site
- monitoring plan indicates that film badges were to be issued to
- participants. The film badge was normally worn at chest level on the
- outside of clothing and was designed to measure the wearer's exposure
- to gamma radiation from external sources. These film badges were
- insensitive to neutron radiation and did not measure the amount of
- radioactive material that might have been inhaled or ingested (1).
-
- Personnel from the Medical Group had responsibility for issuing,
- receiving, processing, and interpreting film badges for Project
- TRINITY. The Site Monitoring Group compiled the film badge records
- for both onsite and offsite personnel. Radiological safety personnel
- and military police recorded the names and identification numbers of
- individuals as they entered the test area. This information was
- recorded in an entry logbook and on a personal exposure data card.
- Upon leaving the test area, individuals returned their film badges to
- the check station. When the film badges were processed and
- interpreted, the reading was entered on the individuals exposure data
- card. In this manner, the number of times an individual entered the
- test area and his cumulative exposure history were recorded and
- maintained (1).
-
-
- 4.2 GAMMA RADIATION EXPOSURE
-
- The safety and monitoring report lists film badge readings for about
- 700 individuals who participated in Project TRINITY from 16 July 1945
- to 1 January 1946 (1). This list includes both military and
- nonmilitary personnel who were involved with the TRINITY operation and
- postshot activities. However, records are available for only 44 of
- the 144 to 160 members of the evacuation detachment (1). In addition,
- some of these film badge listings may be for personnel who were only
- peripherally involved with TRINITY activities, such as family members
- and official guests who visited the site.
-
- According to the safety and monitoring report, by 1 January 1946, 23
- individuals had received cumulative gamma exposures greater than 2 but
- less than 4 roentgens. An additional 22 individuals received gamma
- exposures between 4 and 15 roentgens. Personnel who received gamma
- exposures exceeding 2 roentgens represent less than six percent of the
- Project TRINITY participants with recorded exposures. As described
- below, these exposures generally resulted when personnel approached
- ground zero several times (1).
-
- Information is available regarding the activities of some of these
- personnel. One of the drivers of the earth-sampling group's
- lead-lined tank, an Army sergeant who traveled three times to ground
- zero, received an exposure of 15 roentgens. A second tank driver,
- also an Army sergeant, received an exposure of 3.3 roentgens. Three
- members of the earth-sampling group, all of whom traveled in the tank
- to ground zero, received exposures of 10, 7.5, and 5 roentgens. An
- Army photographer who entered the test area six times between 23 July
- and 20 October received 12.2 roentgens (1).
-
- Four individuals involved with excavating the buried supports of the
- TRINITY tower from 8 October to 10 October 1945 received gamma
- exposures ranging from 3.4 to 4.7 roentgens. Film badge readings for
- this three-day period indicate that the two individuals who operated
- mechanical shovels received 3.4 and 4.3 roentgens, while the two who
- supervised and monitored the excavation received exposures of 4.2 and
- 4.7 roentgens. The individual receiving 4.7 roentgens during the
- excavation operation had received 1.3 roentgens from a previous
- exposure, making his total exposure 6 roentgens (1).
-
- An Army captain who accompanied all test and observer parties into the
- ground zero area between 1 September and 11 October 1945 received a
- total gamma exposure of 2.6 roentgens (1). The activities and times
- of exposure are not known for other personnel with exposures over 2
- roentgens.
-
- According to the dosimetry records for 1946, about 115 people visited
- the test site that year. No one ventured inside the fence surrounding
- ground zero, and no one received an exposure greater than 1 roentgen
- (1; 16).
-
-
-
- REFERENCE LIST
-
-
- The following list of references represents the documents consulted in
- preparation of the Project TRINITY volume.
-
-
- AVAILABILITY INFORMATION
-
- An availability statement has been included at the end of the
- reference citation for those readers who wish to read or obtain copies
- of source documents. Availability statements were correct at the time
- the bibliography was prepared. It is anticipated that many of the
- documents marked unavailable may become available during the
- declassification review process. The Coordination and Information
- Center (CIC) and the National Technical Information Service (NTIS)
- will be provided future DNA-WT documents bearing an EX after the
- report number.
-
- Source documents bearing an availability statement of CIC may be
- reviewed at the following address:
-
- Department of Energy
- Coordination and Information Center
- (Operated by Reynolds Electrical & Engineering Co., Inc.)
- ATTN: Mr. Richard V. Nutley
- 2753 S. Highland
- P.O. Box 14100
- Las Vegas, Nevada 89114
-
- Phone: (702) 734-3194
- FTS: 598-3194
-
-
- Source documents bearing an availability statement of NTIS may be
- purchased from the National Technical Information Service. When
- ordering by mail or phone, please include both the price code and the
- NTIS number. The price code appears in parentheses before the NTIS
- order number.
-
- National Technical Information Service
- 5285 Port Royal Road
- Springfield, Virginia 22161
- Phone: (703) 487-4650
- (Sales Office)
-
- Additional ordering information or assistance may be obtained by
- writing to the NTIS, Attention: Customer Service, or by calling (703)
- 487-4660.
-
-
- PROJECT TRINITY REFERENCES
-
- *Available from NTIS; order number appears before the asterisk.
- **Available at CIC.
- ***Not available, see Availability Information page.
- ****Requests subject to Privacy Act restrictions.
-
- 1. Aebersold, Paul. July 16th Nuclear Explosion-Safety and
- Monitoring of Personnel (U). Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Atomic
- Energy Commission. Los Alamos, NM.: LASL. LA-616. January 9, 1947.
- 170 Pages.***
-
- 2. Bainbridge, K. T. Memorandum to All Concerned, Subject: TR
- Circular No. 18--Total Personnel at TR. [Base Camp, Trinity Site:
- NM.] July 3, 1945. 1 Page.**
-
- 3. Bainbridge, K. T. TRINITY. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory.
- Los Alamos, NM.: LASL, LA-6300-H and Washington, D. C.: GPO. May
- 1976. 82 Pages.**
-
- 4. Bramlet, Walt. Memorandum for Thomas J. Hirons, Subject: DOD
- Participants in Atmospheric Tests, wo/encl. Los Alamos Scientific
- Laboratory. Los Alamos, NM. ISD-5. February 20, 1979. 4 Pages.**
-
- 5. General Electric Company--TEMPO. Compilation of Local Fallout
- Data from Test Detonations 1945-1962. Vol. 1: "Continental US Tests."
- Washington, D. C.: Defense Nuclear Agency. DNA 1251-1(EX.). 1979.
- 619 Pages. (A99) AD/AO79 309.*
-
- 6. Groves, Leslie R., LTG, USA. Memorandum for Secretary of War,
- [Subject: TRINITY]. [Washington, D.C.] 18 July 1945. 13 Pages.**
-
- 7. Groves, Leslie R., LTG, USA (Ret.). Now It Can Be Told: The Story
- of the Manhattan Project. New York, NY.: Harper and Row. 1962. 444
- Pages.
-
- 8. Headquarters, 9812th Technical Service Unit, Provisional
- Detachment No. I (Company "B"). [Extract from: Daily Diary,
- Provisional Detachment No. 1 (Company "B"), 9812th Technical Service
- Unit.] Army Corps of Engineers, Department of War. [Santa Fe, NM.]
- 14 July 1945. 2 Pages.**
-
- 9. Headquarters, Special Service Detachment. Supplemental Special
- Guard Orders, with Appendix. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory,
- Manhattan Engineer District. [Alamogordo, NM.] 14 July 1945. 4
- Pages.**
-
- 10. Hempelmann, L. H., M.D. [Extracts from: "Preparation and
- Operational Plan of Medical Group (TR-7) for Nuclear Explosion 16 July
- 1945."] Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Atomic Energy Commission.
- Los Alamos, NM.: LASL. LA-631(Deleted). June 13, 1947. 32 Pages.***
-
- 11. Hoffman, J. G. [Extracts from "Health Physics Report on
- Radioactive Contamination throughout New Mexico Following the Nuclear
- Explosion, Part A--Physics."] Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory,
- Manhattan Engineer District. [Los Alamos, NM.] [1945.] 31 Pages.**
-
- 12. Lamont, Lansing. Day of TRINITY. New York, NY.: Atheneum.
- 1965. 331 Pages.
-
- 13. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Public Relations Office. "Los
- Alamos: Beginning of an Era, 1943-1945." Atomic Energy Commission.
- Los Alamos, NM.: LASL. 1967. 65 Pages.**
-
- 14. Oppenheimer, J. R. Memorandum for Group Leaders, Subject:
- TRINITY Test. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory. Los Alamos, NM.
- June 14, 1945. 2 Pages.**
-
- 15. Palmer, T. O., Maj., USA. Evacuation Detachment at TRINITY.
- [Manhattan Engineer District, Army Corps of Engineers.] [Los Alamos,
- NM.] [18 July 1945.] 2 Pages.**
-
- 16. Reynolds Electrical & Engineering Company, Inc. [Personnel
- Radiation Exposures, 1945, 1946] Las Vegas, NV. Microfilm.****
-
- 17. Warren, S. L., COL., USA. Directions for Personnel at Base Camp
- at Time of Shot. Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, Manhattan Engineer
- District. [Alamogordo, NM.] 15 July 1945. 1 Page.**
-
- 18. Warren, S. L., COL, USA; Hempelmann, L. H., M.D. Extracts from:
- Personal Notes, Subject: Events in Camp Immediately Following
- Shot--July 16, 1945. 1945. 2 Pages.**
-
- 19. Weisskopf, V.; Hoffman, J.; Aebersold, Paul; Hempelmann, L. H.
- Memorandum for George Kistiakowsky, Subject: Measurement of Blast,
- Radiation, Heat and Light and Radioactivity at Trinity. [Los Alamos,
- NM.] 5 September 1945. 2 Pages.**
-
-
-
-
- THE END
-
-