Atomic Thunder
The Maralinga Story
By Elizabeth Tynan
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*Winner of the Prime Minister's Literary Award for Australian History 2017*
*Winner of the CHASS Australia Book Prize 2017*
In September 2016 it will be 60 years since the first British mushroom cloud rose above the plain at Maralinga in South Australia. The atomic weapons test series wreaked havoc on Indigenous communities and turned the land into a radioactive wasteland.
In 1950 Australian prime minister Robert Menzies blithely agreed to atomic tests that offered no benefit to Australia and relinquished control over them and left the public completely in the dark. This book reveals the devastating consequences of that decision. After earlier tests at Monte Bello and Emu Field, in 1956 Australia dutifully provided 3200 square kilometres of South Australian desert to the British Government, along with logistics and personnel.
How could a democracy such as Australia host another country's nuclear program in the midst of the Cold War? In this meticulously researched and shocking work, journalist and academic Elizabeth Tynan reveals how Australia allowed itself to be duped. Maralinga was born in secret atomic business, and has continued to be shrouded in mystery decades after the atomic thunder stopped rolling across the South Australian test site. This book is the most comprehensive account of the whole saga, from the time that the explosive potential of splitting uranium atoms was discovered, to the uncovering of the extensive secrecy around the British tests in Australia many years after the British had departed, leaving an unholy mess behind.
'Just as witnesses to our A-bomb tests turned their backs on the blasts, Australia turned its back on the memory of one of the most diabolical times in our history. Compulsive reading? Make that compulsory. This is a brilliant book.' Phillip Adams
- ISBN:
- 9781742234281
- Format:
- Paperback / softback
- Pages:
- 464
- Published:
- Publisher:
- NewSouth Publishing
- Imprint:
- NewSouth Publishing
- Weight:
- 525 g
Atomic Thunder is a revealing insight into a dark, shameful period in Australia's modern history: almost two decades of dangerous, open-air atomic bomb explosions on Australian territory in the Monte Bello Islands and two atomic weapons sites in northern South Australia.
"Dark" because the 12 atomic bomb explosions and 20-plus "minor tests" were completely shrouded in military secrecy and government cover-ups, deliberately intended to misinform and deceive the unsuspecting Australian public, as well as thousands of servicemen who were drafted into the tests, literally to serve as human guinea pigs.
"Shameful" because the highly radioactive bomb tests scattered massive clouds of lethal radioactive gases and particles across a vast swathe of WA, SA, NT and much of eastern Australia, including more than 3 million fragments of highly toxic, radioactive Plutonium-239. Aboriginal nomads and communities were virtually ignored or arrogantly pushed off their traditional lands, all in the name of supporting the "British Commonwealth".
This important and thorough academic work was based on Elizabeth Tynan's PhD thesis. I recommend it as essential reading for all students of Australia's modern history, both in High School and in Tertiary Studies. We must learn from this ugly episode in our nation's development and ensure that never again shall any government be allowed to so arrogantly and reprehensibly trample on the rights and traditional lands of Indigenous people or to so irresponsibly contaminate the living environment of the wider general community.