All In New Mexico

Trinity, the first Atomic bomb

April 30, 2024 TJ Parsons Season 1 Episode 4
Trinity, the first Atomic bomb
All In New Mexico
More Info
All In New Mexico
Trinity, the first Atomic bomb
Apr 30, 2024 Season 1 Episode 4
TJ Parsons

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While Manhattan Project staff members watched anxiously, the device exploded over the New Mexico desert,
 vaporizing the tower and turning the sand around the base of the tower to a green glass. 
Seconds after the explosion came a huge blast wave and heat searing out across the desert. 
No one could see the radiation generated by the explosion, but they all knew it was there.
 The steel container "Jumbo," weighing over 200 tons and transported to the desert only to be eliminated from the test, 
was knocked ajar even though it stood half a mile from ground zero. As the orange and yellow fireball stretched up and spread,
 a second column, narrower than the first, rose and flattened into a mushroom shape, 
thus providing the atomic age with a visual image that has become imprinted on the human consciousness 
as a symbol of power and awesome destruction.

Thanks for listening to all my podcasts. I hope you stay tuned for further episodes of All In New Mexico. If it happened in New Mexico, I'll try and tell it here. If you have a suggestion or story you want me to tell, please send an email. Please search for my YouTube channel "All In New Mexico "for a full video.

Show Notes

Please send me a message. Maybe what you'd like to hear about or what you think I'm doing wrong, (that will be a long list).

While Manhattan Project staff members watched anxiously, the device exploded over the New Mexico desert,
 vaporizing the tower and turning the sand around the base of the tower to a green glass. 
Seconds after the explosion came a huge blast wave and heat searing out across the desert. 
No one could see the radiation generated by the explosion, but they all knew it was there.
 The steel container "Jumbo," weighing over 200 tons and transported to the desert only to be eliminated from the test, 
was knocked ajar even though it stood half a mile from ground zero. As the orange and yellow fireball stretched up and spread,
 a second column, narrower than the first, rose and flattened into a mushroom shape, 
thus providing the atomic age with a visual image that has become imprinted on the human consciousness 
as a symbol of power and awesome destruction.

Thanks for listening to all my podcasts. I hope you stay tuned for further episodes of All In New Mexico. If it happened in New Mexico, I'll try and tell it here. If you have a suggestion or story you want me to tell, please send an email. Please search for my YouTube channel "All In New Mexico "for a full video.

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