INSTITUTE FOR THE HARMONIOUS DEVELOPMENT OF ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY
Project Gnome post image

Project Gnome

Nuclear Test site, Project Gnome, New Mexico
Nuclear Test site, Project Gnome, New Mexico

We collect vintage photographs of thermonuclear explosions, missiles and the social lunacy around them.
Therefore, while traveling around the New Mexico area, we naturally had to visit the lovely Loving village and the nearby explosion site of the Gnome Project, one of our favorite atomic tests. Gnome was part of the Plowshare Program, which developed techniques to use nuclear explosives for peaceful construction purposes. It was hoped that the “friendly atom” would aid in mining, widen the Panama canal, melt the polar ice caps or, in the case of Gnome, “vaporize salt deposits to study the possibility of converting the heat produced by a nuclear explosion into steam for the production of electric power.”

Project Gnome - American Photographs - P.W.VOIGT PHOTOGRAPHY - INSTITUTE FOR THE HARMONIOUS DEVELOPMENT OF ART AND PHOTOGRAPHY
Atomic Test Site, Project Gnome, New Mexico

The nuclear device was placed 361 meters underground at the end of a 340 meters tunnel that was supposed to self-seal upon detonation. It was detonated on 10 December 1961.
It worked, well partially. The thermonuclear blast produced steam. Some of it even escaped from the sealed shaft. Unfortunately and surprisingly, the released steam was radioactive.
The detonation created a cavity 20 meters wide and 50 meters high with a floor of melted rock and salt, which trapped most of the radiation.
Six months later, a new shaft was drilled to enter the Gnome Cavity. The temperature inside the cavity was still around 60 °C.
Inside, they found stalactites made of melted salt and walls covered in multiple shades of blue, green, and violet salt.

Strangelove Collection #837
Operation Plowshare. Test shot “Gnome”
The special seismic crew from Shell Development Company´s exploration
and production research division in Houston are pictured with seismic record
obtained from the Project Gnome five-kiloton nuclear explosion near Carlsbad,
New Mexico.

Vintage gelatin silver print on fibre-based paper. 
20,3 x 25,4 cm. 
Stamped and glued on caption on the verso. Printed 1961


Strangelove Collection #838
Closeup of the seismic record obtained by Shell Development Company´s
special seismic crew

Vintage gelatin silver print on fibre-based paper.
20,3 x 25,4 cm. 
Stamped and glued on caption on the verso. Printed 1961


Strangelove Collection #59
This cavern has been blown out by an underground nuclear explosion.
Now there are fears that the surface disturbances rippling outward from the
megaton blasts are the cause of increasing earthquake activity in California
and Nevada.

Vintage Wirephoto on fibre-based paper.
20,3 x 25,4 cm. 
Stamped and glued on caption on the verso. Printed 1961


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