Tuesday, August 10, 2010

A Map Animation of the Atomic Age

Via Boing Boing and The New Yorker, a map animation that shows every detonation of a nuclear bomb until 1998, by Japanese artist Isao Hashimoto:



Says The New Yorker:
It is the sort of set of pictures that makes you want to read—to learn more, for example, about how it came to be that France exploded more than a tenth of those bombs (two hundred and ten); China blew up forty-five. Not that anyone was taking cover in Provence: if you don’t watch the icons above and below the map, you might think that Algeria, and not France, was the world’s fourth nuclear-armed power (and that Australia, not Britain, was the third). The Gerboise Bleue explosion, of a seventy-kiloton device, took place in 1960, in the Sahara desert, in the midst of the Algerian war; several others followed. (Later, after Algeria gained its independence, France’s tests moved to French Polynesia; its last one was in 1996.)
It's a wonder Nevada's even still habitable - though I guess you could make an argument that it's not, really...

204 comments:

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토토사이트 said...

Please do keep up the great work...AO

토토사이트 said...

Nice information...AO

룰라벳 said...

I’m looking for this kind of flexibilty...AO

파워볼사이트 said...

Excellent write-up...AO

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