Atomic tourism

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Tourists at ground zero, Trinity site.

Atomic tourism is a relatively new type of tourism in which visitors learn about the Atomic Age by traveling to significant sites in atomic history such as museums with atomic weapons, vehicles that carried atomic weapons or sites where atomic weapons were detonated.[1] The Center for Land Use Interpretation has conducted tours of the Nevada Test Site, Trinity 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."[2][3][4] A Bureau of Atomic Tourism was proposed by American photographer Richard Misrach and writer Myriam Weisang Misrach in 1990.[5][6]

Tri-Cities Visitor and Convention Bureau tour of the Hanford Site (7597549756)
Boarding the bus for Chernobyl (11383815603)
NNSA-NSO-736

Atomic museums

Research and production

Delivery vehicles

Miscellaneous

Explosion sites

Atomic accidents

  • 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.[13]
  • 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.[14]
Chornobyl DSC 0226 13

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. [15]

References

  1. Arizona Republic: Associated Press. “Nuke-site interested spurred by Japan disaster.” Leanne Italie. - Mar. 30, 2011.
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  7. 都立 第五福竜丸展示館 Official Site
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  9. New Sight in Chernobyl's Dead Zone: Tourists - New York Times
  10. Bleak-o Tourism, Welcome to Chernobyl - Lonely Planet Travel
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External links