Nice images showing the worldwide circulation of fallout from the 10 Mt Mike (1952) and 15 Mt Bravo (1954) nuclear tests in the Marshall Islands.pic.twitter.com/dq013YsVD7
Historian of science, secrecy, and nuclear weapons. Professor of STS at @FollowStevens. UC Berkeley alum with a Harvard PhD. NUKEMAP creator. Coder and web dev.
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Nice images showing the worldwide circulation of fallout from the 10 Mt Mike (1952) and 15 Mt Bravo (1954) nuclear tests in the Marshall Islands.pic.twitter.com/dq013YsVD7
Separate from the images, the most amazing part of this article is its framing. It isn't how we'd think about it today — global fallout as a health issue — it's about how useful or not atomic fallout would be for meteorologists studying air circulation on a global scale.pic.twitter.com/3klzrRaQgu
To be fair, scientists can be interested in something for very specific reasons, unrelated to a holistic good/bad verdict for humanity.
I'm not judging them so much as being fascinated that this is why they were interested in it.
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