- Source: Atomic tourism
Atomic tourism or nuclear tourism is a form of tourism in which visitors witness nuclear tests or learn about the Atomic Age by traveling to significant sites in atomic history such as nuclear test reactors, museums with nuclear weapon artifacts, delivery vehicles, sites where atomic weapons were detonated, and nuclear power plants.
In the United States, the Center for Land Use Interpretation has conducted tours of the Nevada Test Site, Trinity Site, Hanford Site, and other historical atomic age sites, to explore the cultural significance of these Cold War nuclear zones. The book Overlook: Exploring the Internal Fringes of America describes the purpose of this tourism as "windows into the American psyche, landmarks that manifest the rich ambiguities of the nation's cultural history." A Bureau of Atomic Tourism was proposed by American photographer Richard Misrach and writer Myriam Weisang Misrach in 1990.
Visitors to the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone often visit the nearby deserted city of Pripyat. The Hiroshima Peace Memorial (Genbaku Dome), which survived the destruction of Hiroshima, is now a UNESCO World Heritage Site at the center of Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park. Bikini Atoll was at one time the site of a diving tourism initiative. As of 2012, China planned to build a tourist destination at its first atomic test site, the Malan Base at Lop Nur in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.
Several nuclear power plants offer tours of the facilities or provide education at visitor centers.
Nuclear tests
During the early atomic age fission was viewed as a sign of progress and modernity.
In this light Las Vegas became in the mid-1940s and early 1950s an original place of atomic tourism when nuclear tests were performed at Nevada Test Site. Seeing nuclear tests was advertised and viewings were hosted in Las Vegas at the time. The city of Las Vegas and its Chamber of Commerce nicknamed Vegas as the "Atomic City" in an attempt to attract tourists. So called "bomb viewing parties" took place on desert hilltops, or more famously at the panoramic Sky Room at the Desert Inn, and casinos held Miss Atomic pageants while serving Atomic Cocktails.
Atomic museums
= Research and production
=Los Alamos Historical Museum, Los Alamos, New Mexico – items from the Manhattan Project
Bradbury Science Museum, Los Alamos, New Mexico – history of the Manhattan Project
X-10 Graphite Reactor, Oak Ridge, Tennessee – first nuclear reactor to produce Plutonium 239
Savannah River Site, South Carolina – production site of plutonium and tritium
Experimental Breeder Reactor I, Arco, Idaho – first nuclear reactor to produce electrical power, first breeder reactor, and first reactor to use plutonium as fuel
Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant, Obninsk – the first nuclear reactor in the world that produced commercial electricity
Hanford Site, Washington – location of the B Reactor which produced some of the plutonium for the Trinity test and the Fat Man bomb
George Herbert Jones Laboratory, Chicago, Illinois – where plutonium was first isolated and characterized
American Museum of Science and Energy, Oak Ridge, Tennessee – bomb casings
National Atomic Testing Museum, Las Vegas, Nevada – offers tours to the Nevada Test Site
Strategic missile forces museum in Ukraine, Ukraine
National Museum of Nuclear Science & History, Albuquerque, New Mexico
= Delivery vehicles
=Tinian Airfield, Northern Mariana Islands – launch site for the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan during World War II
Titan Missile Museum, Sahuarita, Arizona – public underground missile museum
Nike Missile Site SF-88, Marin County, California – fully restored Nike missile complex
Ronald Reagan Minuteman Missile State Historic Site, Cooperstown, North Dakota – last surviving complete facilities from USAF 321st Missile Wing (01Nov63-30Sep98), namely Oscar-Zero Missile Alert Facility (4 mi N of Cooperstown) and November-33 Launch Facility (missile silo, 2 mi E of Cooperstown)
National Museum of Nuclear Science & History, Albuquerque, New Mexico – missiles and rockets
National Museum of the United States Air Force, Dayton, Ohio – the Nagasaki B-29 bomber (Bockscar) and missiles
National Air and Space Museum, Washington, D.C. – the Hiroshima B-29 bomber (Enola Gay)
White Sands Missile Range Museum, New Mexico
Air Force Space and Missile Museum, Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida
Air Force Armament Museum, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida
Minuteman Missile National Historic Site, Wall, South Dakota – Launch Control Facility Delta-01 with its corresponding underground Launch Control Center and Launch Facility (Missile Silo) Delta-09
South Dakota Air and Space Museum, Ellsworth Air Force Base, Box Elder, South Dakota – Minuteman Missile Transporter truck, 44th Missile Wing Training Launch Facility (Training Missile Silo)
Strategic Air Command & Aerospace Museum, Ashland, Nebraska – a museum focusing on aircraft and nuclear missiles of the United States Air Force
Quebec-One Missile Alert Facility, Laramie County, Wyoming – preserved Peacekeeper missile launch control facility
= Miscellaneous
=Greenbrier Bunker, Greenbrier County, West Virginia – underground bunker for the United States Congress
Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, Hiroshima – contains the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, and related memorials
Nagasaki Peace Park and Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, Nagasaki
The Daigo Fukuryū Maru ship, a Japanese fishing boat that was contaminated after the Castle Bravo detonation in 1954. It is now on display in Tokyo at the Tokyo Metropolitan Daigo Fukuryū Maru Exhibition Hall.
CFS Carp – also known as The Diefenbunker, a cold war nuclear museum in a former underground Canadian military facility outside of Ottawa
Chernobyl Museum, Kyiv
Hack Green Secret Nuclear Bunker, Cheshire countryside near the town on Nantwich, UK
Kelvedon Hatch Secret Nuclear Bunker
Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Field Office exhibit hall
Atomic mines
Port Radium on Canada's Great Bear Lake site of a uranium mine important to the Manhattan Project
Explosion sites
The alphabetic list by nations is as follows:
Australia
Maralinga, South Australia – site of Operation Buffalo and Operation Antler
India
Pokhran, Rajasthan – site of the Pokhran-II test
Japan
Hiroshima, first wartime use of an atomic bomb
Nagasaki, last wartime use of an atomic bomb
United States
Carson National Forest, Rio Arriba County, New Mexico – site of Project Gasbuggy
Carlsbad, New Mexico – site of Project Gnome
Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada – US nuclear test site
Nye County, Nevada – site of Project Faultless
Pacific Proving Grounds, US nuclear test site
Parachute, Colorado – site of Project Rulison
Rio Blanco County, Colorado – site of Project Rio Blanco
Sand Springs Range, Nevada – site of Project Shoal
Trinity Site, Socorro County, New Mexico – site of the first artificial nuclear explosion
Soviet Union
Semipalatinsk Test Site, testing venue for the Soviet Union's nuclear weapons.
Atomic accidents
The Chernobyl disaster was the worst nuclear power plant accident in history. Tourists can access the exclusion zone surrounding the plant, and in particular the abandoned city of Prypiat.
Three Mile Island was the site of a well publicized accident, the most significant in the history of American commercial nuclear power. The Three Mile Island Visitor Center, in Middletown, PA, educates the public through exhibitions and video displays.
Windscale fire On October 10, 1957, the graphite core of a British nuclear reactor at Windscale, Cumbria, caught fire, releasing substantial amounts of radioactive contamination into the surrounding area. The event, known as the Windscale fire, was considered the world's worst reactor accident until the Three Mile Island accident in 1979. Both incidents were dwarfed by the magnitude of the Chernobyl disaster in 1986. The Visitor Center was closed in 1992, and the public may no longer visit, it has been turned into a center for supplier conferences, and business events.
Literary and cinematic works on atomic tourism
The novel O-Zone, by Paul Theroux, involves a group of wealthy New York tourists who enter and party in a post-nuclear disaster zone in the Ozarks.
References
External links
Atomic Heritage Foundation
My Radioactive Vacation by Phil Stuart
Hanford site tours
"Adventures in Atomic Tourism"
Atomkeller Museum Haigerloch, Germany
Atomic Tourism: Exploring the world's Nuclear at Atomic Sites
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Propulsi Pesawat Terbang Nuklir
- Charlize Theron
- Rusia
- BTS
- Vietnam
- Daftar tempat yang dijuluki Venesia dari Timur
- Haji
- Hubungan luar negeri Korea Selatan
- Katedral Nagasaki
- Daftar organisasi Perserikatan Bangsa-Bangsa menurut tempat
- Atomic tourism
- Trinity (nuclear test)
- Atomic Age
- Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion
- Atomic (cocktail)
- Ukrainian National Chernobyl Museum
- Semipalatinsk Test Site
- Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park
- Savannah River Site
- Hanford Site