“Unraveling the Mysteries: How Fire, Ice, and Plutonium Could Redefine Our Understanding of the Universe”

"Unraveling the Mysteries: How Fire, Ice, and Plutonium Could Redefine Our Understanding of the Universe"

Sadly, this is but one of many injustices the Greenland Inuit have suffered at the hands of the United States and Danish governments, who in 1957 displaced two of their villages 100 kilometres in order to make way for Thule Air Base – today known as Pituffik Space Base. Due to its strategic location, Pituffik remains as vital as ever to North American Aerospace Defense, with the original BMEWS radars being replaced in 2001 with a far more sophisticated, $40 million AN/FPS-132 Solid State Phased Radar Array System or SSPARS. Though the 1968 Thule Crash was one of the worst nuclear weapons accidents in history in terms of long-term environmental, health, and political impacts, it was far from the only one.

As covered in our previous videos That Time the Moon Nearly Started World War 3 (and Other Silly Cold War Shenanigans), When Dropping a Wrench Almost Cause Armageddon, as well as Did a Scientific Experiment Really Nearly Start WWIII in 1995? over on our sister channel Highlight History, the tense, highly-complex environment of Cold War nuclear brinksmanship resulted in dozens of perilous accidents and near-misses that brought the world within a hair’s breadth of total disaster. It’s a wonder we survived the 20th Century at all.

Expand for References

January 21, 1968 – Thule, Greenland, The Broken Arrow Project, https://scalar.usc.edu/works/brokenarrowproject/1968—thule-greenland

Vanderklippe, Nathan, The Crash, the Inuit, and the Bomb, Up Here, October/November 2012, https://www.uphere.ca/articles/crash-inuit-and-bomb

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