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This photo has been misidentified as a mushroom cloud for decades. The Pulitzer Prize winning book from 1986, The Making of the Atomic Bomb, described it as “the mushroom cloud over Hiroshima ...
The "mushroom cloud" in the iconic photo after the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima is actually a plume of smoke from raging fires. Pictured: Children wear masks to protect themselves from ...
Rare Photo of the Mushroom Cloud Over Hiroshima Discovered in a Former Japanese Elementary School. Taken just minutes after the bomb fell, as incomprehensible horror unfolded below.
"A shot showing the mushroom cloud split into two like this is very rare." The photo was found among articles related to the atomic bombing now owned by Honkawa Elementary School in Hiroshima city ...
Photos of Hiroshima mushroom cloud over-simplify the bomb, capturing its power but not its tragedy After seeing “Oppenheimer,” I have become more certain than ever that we must begin looking ...
North Korea 'nuclear bomb test': Mushroom cloud photos do not show detonation of thermonuclear weapon. State media did not release any images of the test itself, which is believed to have been ...
Snapped in the skies above the U.S. state of Texas, the awe-inspiring snap shows an incredible natural phenomenon called a supercell storm.
Cai Guo-Qiang's protechnic artwork shot up into the sky around 3:25 p.m. this Saturday, 75 years after the Chicago Pile-1 reaction. The artist told UChicago News, “In the 1990s, I used black gunpowder ...
The so-called “mushroom cloud” photo mimics what’s shown for a pulse storm’s mature phase. These kinds of storms usually last 30 minutes or less because of a lack of wind shear, or ...
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