Tag Archives: Snapshots

Atomic Snapshots: Radar Hill

During the Cold War, three lines of defense protected North America from the “imminent” threat against Soviet long-range bombers. These consisted of radar stations along the DEW line (Distant Early Warning), the MCL (Mid-Canada Line), and the Pinetree Line. These joint ventures by Canada and the U.S. were staffed by U.S. Air Force and Royal Canadian Air Force personnel from 1951 to 1991.

U.S. Navy diagram from All Hands magazine, September 1956 (Department of Defense).

With the development of intercontinental ballistic missiles by 1960, however, most of these defenses became obsolete and were gradually dismantled.

Radar Hill is part of Pacific Rim National Park on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. The decommissioned RCAF Station Tofino provides hiking trails and scenic viewpoints. The site was operated as a Pinetree Line radar station from 1955 to 1958.

Remnants of the base are still visible, whether guy wire hooks, concrete pads, embedded radio tower piping, foundation walls, or the decking laid on top of the old building foundations.

The History Guy: The Distant Early Warning Line and Forgotten History

Atomic Snapshots: Marchant Calculator

Marchant calculator on display at the Los Alamos History Museum

The Manhattan Project needed lots of computers for such things as design, explosive yield, the physics of implosion, and more. At the time “computers” usually meant a woman whose job was to perform calculations by hand or with a mechanical calculator, the Marchant. Women with degrees in math and science often took jobs as computers because of discrimination in their own fields. As such, many of the women who became computers for the Manhattan Project were grossly overqualified for these jobs.

By 1943, about 20 computers worked in the T-5 Computation group at Los Alamos, under the supervision of Mary Frankel, wife of Stanley Frankel, who, with Eldred Nelson, organized the computing program. The wartime mechanical calculators were integral to the project, but lacked mechanical reliability and required routine repairs. Richard Feynman and Nicholas Metropolis started repairing the Marchant machines as an extracurricular activity and grew more adept at maintaining them, enabling the scientific staff to model complex experiments. Metropolis would later build the MANIAC computer at Los Alamos from a design by John von Neumann.

The Marchant calculator on display at the Los Alamos History Museum is a Figurematic from the 1950s. The women computers at Los Alamos would have worked on Marchant Silent Speed calculators, first developed in 1932, and continuously improved until the Figurematic line which was produced until the business closed in the early 1970s.

Atomic Snapshot: CEMP

The Community Environmental Monitoring Program (CEMP) is a network of 29 monitoring stations surrounding and downwind of the Nevada Test Site (now the Nevada National Security Site or NNSS) where United States nuclear tests were conducted. The program is a joint venture between the Desert Research Institute and the Department of Energy’s Nevada Field Office.

CEMP readings in Delta, Utah

The stations provide continuous measurements of gamma radiation and collect air particulate samples that are analyzed for radioactivity and meteorological measurements that aid in interpreting variations in background radiation. The CEMP stations provide evidence to the public that no releases of radiation of health concern are occurring from the NNSS to the stations.

Of the 29 stations, 23 upload data in real-time to a public website as well as digital readout displays at the stations, providing transparency to the public. The other 6 stations upload hourly.

The CEMP station pictured, above, is in Delta, Utah. The CEMP stations are designed to reduce the public perception of risk through community involvement. Be sure to visit the real-time data from the station: Delta, Utah (DRI-CEMP) Weather Station.

40th Anniversary of the Community Environmental Monitoring Program with William “Ted” Hartwell, sponsored by the National Atomic Testing Museum (January 7, 2021)