Posted on 04/25/2018 7:55:50 PM PDT by Enlightened1
The mountains collapse after a fifth blast last fall has led to the creation of a massive chimney that could leak radioactive fallout into the air, researchers have found
North Koreas mountain nuclear test site has collapsed, putting China and other nearby nations at unprecedented risk of radioactive exposure, two separate groups of Chinese scientists studying the issue have confirmed.
The collapse after five nuclear blasts may be why North Korean leader Kim Jong-un declared on Friday that he would freeze the hermit states nuclear and missile tests and shut down the site, one researcher said.
The last five of Pyongyangs six nuclear tests have all been carried out under Mount Mantap at the Punggye-ri nuclear test site in North Koreas northwest. North Korea suspends nuclear and missile tests
One group of researchers found that the most recent blast tore open a hole in the mountain, which then collapsed upon itself. A second group concluded that the breakdown created a chimney that could allow radioactive fallout from the blast zone below to rise into the air.
(Excerpt) Read more at scmp.com ...
Well, these NK tests are purportedly underground, and the supposed catastrophe is that they are LEAKING into the atmosphere. So there you are.
You had me, and then you lost me. I.e. link no good.
Link fine here. People would stand on the roof of the bar and then when the flash came they would be startled and jump. That’s where the term ‘flash dance’ came from.
.... and everyone lived happily ever after..............
Don’t bet on it.
“Thats all crap”......”
“And yes Im a Chen E and nuclear physics dude”..
I assume you meant “Chem E” and NOT that you are some Chinese “nuke dude”. :)
Rods from God?
Sorry I missed your query. The main Punggye-ri Nuke Test Site (the portals pictured above) is at
41°16'49.16"N, 129° 5'9.21"E
BTW, I heartily recommend Google Earth over Google Maps for "intel" work.
GE's (Google Earth's) "time slider" is invaluable for monitoring changes over time at a site.
BTW, for accuracy and repeatability, I also recommend setting GE's "Elevation Exaggeration"(in "Preferences") to the minimum (0.01), removing all tilt, and setting "North up" (clicking the "N" at top right).
Happy Hunting!
TXnMA
Thanks. I had actually found this spot, but I had a lower contrast, I think, so I didn’t recognize it. I thought the dark spot above the point labeled “Portal” in your included image looked like a “pit”, possibly created by a collapse.
Not sure I have the collapse site placemarked, but, i'll check.
Are you able to handle KML files? I might be able to put a KML file of placemarked Nork NTSite features in a folder on my domainserver for you to pick up via FTP...
TXnMA
If I knew what a KML file was, I could tell you :-)
"Keyhole" was our first series of really effective reconsats. "KML" ( a "markup" language like HTML) -- aka "Keyhole Markup Language" -- was developed to manipulate the data from the Keyhole sats. Google supposedly acquired it from a CIA front company...
"Play" with Google Earth for a while... That sidebar on the left is your "KML Catalog" (similar to the ArcGIS Catalog for GIS mapping).
Every time you create a "Push-Pin" Placemark, it's stored in your catalog. If it's checked, the pin itself (and its label) are visible. No matter where on earth you're located, double-clicking on that placemark's name will "fly" you right to that point -- and zoom you right in on the exact view you had when you created it -- including the date and time of the overflight!
BTW, the "clock" ion at top will open up a "time slider" at upper left that will allow you to select between different overflight dates for your location. (You can "time-travel" back into history -- and pick the best [cloud-free] views, etc.)
Have fun! And, if you have questions, FReepMail me...
FRegards,
TXnMA
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