Weapons Testing Trends and Totals


(From the Deseret News, Dec. 22, 1994)




Germs tested, Number of Test Series, Start, Finish Dates of Test

coccidioides, 3, Sept. 1960 to March 1964

fluorescent particles 11, May 1953 to May21, 1963

pasteurella, 1, Oct. 9, 1952

pathogens, 1, June 1950 to Nov. 1950

undisclosed agents, 1, throughout 1954

unknown agents, 1, Jan. 24, '64 to Feb. 3, '64

aspergillus fumigatus, 1, May 1953 to June 1953

bacillus anthracis, 7, Jan. 1954 to Sept. 1960

bacillus subtillis, 54, through 1945 to Sept. 10, '86

botullinum toxin, 1, Sept. 1960

brucella melitensis, 3, June 1952 to Dec. 1952

brucella suis, 17, May 12, 1952 to Feb. '56

clostridium botulinum, 1, Nov. 19, 1952

coccidioides uranine, 1, Nov. 1962 to March 1963

coxiella burnetii, 11, June 1, 1951 to April 4, 1967

virus bacterophage, 1, Sept. 4, 1986 (28 tests)

pasteurella pestis, 1, March 27, 1952

pasteurella rularensis, 21, April 9, 1952 to April 4, 1967

psittacosis, 1, throughout 1951

serratia marcescens, 11, May 1953 to May 18, '78

uranine dye, 1, Aug. 1964 to Sept. 1964

wheat rust spores, 1, Feb. 18, 1952 to May 27, 1952

wheat stem rust, 5, Sept. 12, 1952 to Aug '54




Unsure if germs were confined to Army lands.....

(From January 1951 through February 1956, Dugway Proving Ground conducted 36 test operations in which officials were unsure if tests were confined to Army lands.)

Germ tested, Total Tests, Date Started and Ended

Bacillus anthracis, 3, Jan 1954 to Feb. 1956

Brucella melitensis, 3, June 1952 to Dec. 1952

Brucella suis, 16, May 19, 1952 to Feb. 1956

Clostridium botulinum, 1, Nov. 19, 1952

Coxiella burnetii, 3, June 1, 1951 to Nov. 1952

Pasteurella pestis, 1, March 27, 1952

Pasteurella tularensis, 6, April 9, 1952 to Nov. 18, l954

Psittacosis, 1, through 1951

Pasteurella, 1, Oct. 9, 1954

Undisclosed Agents, 1, through 1954




Chemical Tests

Aerial testing of nerve agent GA

Deadly nerve agent GA was sprayed at Dugway Proving Ground in six different instances, from Dec. 19, 1952 to Feb. 2, 1953. In the first four experiments, GA was spread by an F-80 fighter jet flying 480 mph at a height of 100 fee. In the last two tests, F-47M and F-47N fighters were used at speeds of 310 mph and at the same 100 foot heights.



Aerial testing of nerve agent GB

In 10 tests conducted between July 16, 1952 to Feb. 12, 1953, Dugway Proving Ground sprayed nerve agent GB from an F-80 flying 480 mph at heights ranging from 75 to 200 feet.

GB was sprayed at Dugway in seven tests between April 17, 1953, to May 13, 1953 using an F3D-2 aircraft flying at 360 knots at heights ranging from 20 to 40 feet.

In four more tests conducted at Dugway between Feb. 10-24, 1954, an F-80 sprayed GB while flying at 470 mph at heights between 65 and 130 feet.

On six dates from April 1, 1962 to May 31, 1962, more than 4,100 pounds of GB was sprayed at Dugway at heights ranging from 115 to 190 feet (the type of aircraft and speeds were undocumented)




Firing arms at fortifications with caged animals inside

Dugway Proving Ground conducted demonstrations weekly by firing 12 arms filled with nerve agent GB at fortifications with caged animals inside, as soldiers watched their deaths via TV.

The tests were conducted for 12 weeks from September 1959 to December 1959. During the next nine years - from 1960 to 1968 - the tests were performed 40 of the 52 weeks annually. The operations concluded the following year, with the tests being conducted weekly form January 1969 to June 1969.




Nonaerial tests with VX, GA and GB

GA, GB and VX were used in 1,178 documented tests from 1951 to 1969. Tests ranged from exploding shells filled with nerve agent to assessing troop operations in contaminated areas.

Test Type, Test Series, Total Tests

Attacks on planes, arms leaks, on plane, 3, 48

Arms and rockets filled with GA or GB, 2, 155

Arms filled with GA or GB, 14, 715

Assessments in VX-contaminated areas, 2, 5

Burned B-24 bomber with GB aboard, 1, 1

Downwind hazards of M-55 destruction, 1, 5

Landmines filled with VX, 3, 14

M-55 rockets filled with VX, 10, 126

155-mm shells filled with VX, 8, 55

8-inch howitzer shells filled with VX, 3, 21

Testing GB persistency in various temps, 1, 10

Various disposal, contamination tests, 2, 23




Nuclear Tests

Nevada Test Site has hosted the likes of Buster, Sunbeam, Mandrel and Tinderbox - four of the 25 total operations with nuclear bomb tests. Nearly two-thirds of the 141 nuclear-bomb tests documented by the Deseret News were open-air detonations. The underground tests documented are only those where the government acknowledges at least a slight release of radiation to the atmosphere. Hundred of other underground tests were conducted where the government says all radiation was contained underground.

First open-air test operation: Operation Ranger, five tests, January and February 1951

First under-ground test operation: Operation Plumbbob, 1 underground test (of 25 total detonations), Mary through October 1957.

Last open-air test operation: Operation Charioteer, two open-air tests, March and April 1986.

Last underground operation: Operation Grenadier, 1 test, April 6, 1985.

Total number of test operations: 25

Total open-air tests: 94

Total underground test: 46



Four Largest Open-Air Nuclear Bomb Tests

TNT Amount, Date, Operation, Code name

80,000, Sept. 19, 1958, Hardtack II, Eddy

74,000, July 5, 1957, Plumbbob, Hood

61,000, June 4, 1953, Upshot-Knothole, Climax

44,000, Aug. 31, 1957, Plumbbob, Smoky

Four Largest Underground Nuclear Bomb Tests

TNT Amount, Date, Operation, Code name, Radiation

104,000, July 6, 1962, Storax, Sedan, release detected

40,000, Oct. 29, 1969, Mandrel, Pod, accidental

38,000, Sept. 12, '58, Hardtack II, Otero, some released

30,000, Dec. 8, 1968, Bowline, Schooner, release detected



Even Bigger Bombs?

Army documents show that an underground test was conducted on Jan. 19, 1967, with an undisclosed yield of 20,000 to 200,000 tons of TNT. Code named Nash of Operation Latchkey, the test at Nevada Test Site resulted in "accidental release of radioactivity detected off site."

Similarly, an underground test with "radioactivity detected off site" at Nevada Test Site on April 10, 1968, had a TNT-tonnage yield of 20,000 to 150,000 tons. The test was code-named Glencoe of Operation Charioteer.




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