View Full Version : Rarely-seen photos of nuclear explosion
Serpo
1st September 2011, 05:59 PM
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/photo/2011-09/01/c_131087830_3.htm
Cebu_4_2
1st September 2011, 06:33 PM
Lot of them look to be of Bikini Island. Mankind in general is retarded, the asshats that follow the retards directions are worse.
Dogman
1st September 2011, 06:41 PM
Lot of them look to be of Bikini Island. Mankind in general is retarded, the asshats that follow the retards directions are worse. Several in enewetak also!
nunaem
1st September 2011, 06:59 PM
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/photo/2011-09/01/c_131087830_6.htm
They look a little too close for comfort.
osoab
1st September 2011, 07:19 PM
http://bbs.home.news.cn/2011-08/31/121931948_171n.jpg
http://bbs.home.news.cn/2011-08/31/121931948_451n.jpg
Plastic
1st September 2011, 07:24 PM
Gotta admit it, the damned things are beautiful looking. I say we gather up all the banking families and their puppets, put them on an island and give them a front row seat to a final surface detonation demonstration.
joboo
1st September 2011, 07:27 PM
Check the documentary Trinity and Beyond if you haven't.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=avICZA_uQ5U&feature=grec_index
Korbin Dallas
1st September 2011, 08:37 PM
Check the documentary Trinity and Beyond if you haven't.
Excellent documentary. Makes you wonder how much damage those fucksticks did to our planet and our atmosphere with the hundreds of detonations, both surface and in the atmosphere. (And that tool AlGore is worried about a few Suv's. Pshaw...)
joboo
1st September 2011, 09:36 PM
Excellent documentary. Makes you wonder how much damage those fucksticks did to our planet and our atmosphere with the hundreds of detonations, both surface and in the atmosphere. (And that tool AlGore is worried about a few Suv's. Pshaw...)
People have been lighting them off like firecrackers bathing the atmosphere time and time again.
"The United States conducted around 1,054 nuclear tests (by official count) between 1945 and 1992. Most of the tests took place at the Nevada Test Site and the Pacific Proving Grounds in the Marshall Islands. Ten other tests took place at various locations in the United States, including Alaska, Colorado, Mississippi, and New Mexico.
The Soviet Union conducted 715 nuclear tests (by official count) between 1949 and 1990. Most of them took place at the Semipalatinsk Test Site in Kazakhstan and the Northern Test Site at Novaya Zemlya. Additional tests were conducted at various locations in Russia and Kazakhstan, while a small number of tests were conducted in Ukraine, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenia.
The UK has conducted 45 tests (21 in Australian territory, including 9 in mainland South Australia at Maralinga and Emu Field, many others in the U.S. as part of joint test series).
France conducted 210 nuclear tests between February 13, 1960 and January 27, 1996.
The People's Republic of China conducted 45 tests (23 atmospheric and 22 underground, all conducted at Lop Nur Nuclear Weapons Test Base, in Malan, Xinjiang)
India conducted between 5 and 6 tests, at Pokhran.
Pakistan conducted between 3 and 6 tests in response to the Indian tests.
On October 9, 2006 it was announced by North Korea they had conducted a nuclear test in North Hamgyong province on the northeast coast at 10:36 AM (11:30 AEST). "
According to (uhh...cringe..) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_nuclear_tests
Odds are those numbers are much higher.
joboo
1st September 2011, 09:52 PM
Tsar Bomba. 3rd degree burns from 100kms away...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WwlNPhn64TA
Hatha Sunahara
1st September 2011, 10:01 PM
909
Here's a rarely seen picture of an underground nuclear blast called Sedan Storax done in 1962 in the Nevada desert.
Looks quite similar to another underground blast here:
910
and here:
911
But this is a topic that people rush to avoid.
I searched Wikipedia for Sedan Storax. It was a 104 Kt thermonuclear device detonated about 600 feet below the surface in a sandy layer. It made a mound 290 feet high before it vented. The picture above shows it venting. It pushed up about 12 million tons of earth to make a crater 650 feet across.
Imagine if you put a nuke like that in granite bedrock under a tall skyscraper made of steel so it would vent through the building above it. You don't have to imagine--in ten days we will be seeing reruns of it all day.
Hatha
Joe King
2nd September 2011, 12:50 AM
But this is a topic that people rush to avoid.
HathaThe only reason anyone would avoid it is because that's not what happened.
If it was, the stuff you see at the top of the building in the second picture would have been at ground level, not up at the top of the building.
Not to mention the fact that the "bathtub" under the building would have disintigrated.....but it didn't, it was relatively intact.
If you want to know how those buildings came down, ask yourself what the most plausible theory is, not what the most esoteric theory is.
ie how would a demolition company have taken those buildings down?
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