October 21, 2011
Razor wire surrounds Hanford’s
makeshift borders while tattered signs warn of potential contamination
and fines for those daring enough to trespass. This vast stretch of
eastern Washington, covering more than 580 square miles of high desert
plains, is rural Washington at its most serene. But it’s inaccessible
for good reason: It is, by all accounts, a nuclear wasteland.
During
World War II, the Hanford Reservation was chosen by the federal
government as a location to carry out the covert Manhattan Project.
Later, plutonium produced at Hanford provided fuel for the "Fat Man"
bomb that President Truman ordered to be dropped on Nagasaki in 1945,
killing upward of 80,000 Japanese. In all, nine nuclear reactors were
built at Hanford, the last of which ceased operation in 1987. The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency now estimates that as a result of the
nuclear work done at Hanford's facilities, 43 million cubic yards of
radioactive waste were produced and more than 130 million cubic yards of
soil ultimately were contaminated.
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