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         United States Army Corps Of Engineers Manhattan District:     more detail
  1. The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Manhattan District, 2005-01-01
  2. The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
  3. The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by United States. Army. Corps of Engineers. Manhattan District, 2010-07-06
  4. Project Alberta: The Preparation of Atomic Bombs for Use in World War II by Harlow W. Russ, 1990-08
  5. Project Y: The Los Alamos Story. Part I: Toward Trinity. Part II: Beyond Trinity. (History of Modern Physics, 1800-1950, V. 2) by David Hawkins, Edith C. Truslow, et all 2000-09-01

61. U.S. Army Corps Of Engineers New York (Major Recreation Providers)
The Corps of Engineers if the branch of the United States Army with responsibilityfor military Click to go to US Army Corps of Engineers's own Web site.
http://www.ohwy.com/ny/u/uscorpse.htm
Location: New York Major Recreation Providers U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
The Corps of Engineers if the branch of the United States Army with responsibility for military engineering. In peacetime, it is engaged in many civil engineering projects, often related to water, such as harbors and dams. As a result of these projects, the Corps has become one of the country's largest providers of recreation, operating more than 2500 recreation areas and leasing 1800 others to public agencies at the state and local level and to private concerns as well. It is estimated that one American in ten visits a Corps project annually. The history of the Corps dates back to 1775, when the Second Continental Congress authorized the first Chief Engineer to build fortifications near Bunker Hill in Boston Click to go to U.S. Army Corps of Engineers's own Web site. Find similar pages at Major Recreation Providers
Compare 2.1 million apartments
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62. World War Ii - Project Trinity
S1 Committee to determine if the United States could construct which assigned thetask to the Army Corps of Engineers In September 1942, the Corps of Engineers
http://www.cs.mtsu.edu/~alex/ww2/trinity.htm
World War II
project trinity
You all know that the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan in 1945, and you probably know that the government project to develop the atomic bomb was The Manhattan Project, but did you know what happened during the first atomic device test?
This "for your eyes only" project was code-named Operation Trinity, and was the effort to produce the first nuclear detonation. A plutonium-fueled implosion device was detonated on 16 July 1945 at the Alamogordo Bombing Range in south-central New Mexico. Doing this was a large help to the military, for the United States had first atomic device in World War II, which subsequently resulted in our dropping Little Boy on Hiroshima, and Fat Man on Nagasaki, which resulted in Japan surrendering, and our winning the war.
NOTE: Most of this material is almost a direct quote from the United States Atmospheric Nuclear Weapons Tests Nuclear Test Personnel Review , available on Project Gutenberg.
Historical Background of Project Trinity The development of a nuclear weapon was a low priority for the United States before the outbreak of World War II. However, scientists exiled from Germany had expressed concern that the Germans were developing a nuclear weapon. Confirming these fears, in 1939 the Germans stopped all sales of uranium ore from the mines of occupied Czechoslovakia. In a letter sponsored by group of concerned scientists, Albert Einstein informed President Roosevelt that German experiments had shown that an induced nuclear chain reaction was possible and could be used to construct extremely powerful bombs.

63. F U S R A P
of the atomic energy program was transferred to the US Army Corps of Engineers onOct began its study of the many sites used by the United States during the
http://www.nap.usace.army.mil/cenap-pa/971112/FUSRAP.htm
FUSRAP: a new Corps mission
and a new Philadelphia District project
Corps takes over program to clean up old atomic energy development sites
A program managed for 17 years by the U.S. Department of Energy to clean up sites contaminated during the early years of the atomic energy program was transferred to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers on Oct. 13 as part of the fiscal 1998 Energy and Water Appropriations Bill. (see related story on this page) . Other districts involved are Baltimore, Buffalo, New England, New York and St. Louis. FUSRAP began in 1974 when DOE began its study of the many sites used by the United States during the 1940s, 50s and 60s. While some of the sites can be traced back to World War II and the Manhattan Engineer District, other locations were involved in peacetime activities under the Atomic Energy Commission. Both the MED and AEC were predecessors of DOE. Most of the sites contaminated during the early atomic energy program were cleaned up under the less stringent guidelines of that time, leaving trace amounts of radioactive materials at some locations. DOE studied more than 400 sites, finding 46 locations in 14 states that were contaminated with radioactivity in excess of current guidelines. Since 1979, cleanup has been completed at 23 of the sites with partial cleanup at 19 others. Because of the very low concentrations of contaminants and given the current land use patterns in the area, none of the sites pose an immediate health risk to the public or environment.

64. Project BookRead - FREE Online Book: The Atomic Bombings Of Hiroshima And Nagasa
for his information of the nature of atomic explosions, Majors Noland Varley andWalter C. Youngs, Corps of Engineers, United States Army, for their
http://tanaya.net/Books/abomb10/
The Atomic Bombings Of Hiroshima And Nagasaki
The Manhattan Engineer District The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
The Manhattan Engineer District
June 29, 1946.
Index
FOREWORD
INTRODUCTION
THE MANHATTAN PROJECT INVESTIGATING GROUP
PROPAGANDA
SUMMARY OF DAMAGES AND INJURIES
MAIN CONCLUSIONS THE SELECTION OF THE TARGET DESCRIPTION OF THE CITIES BEFORE THE BOMBINGS Hiroshima Nagasaki THE ATTACKS Hiroshima Nagasaki GENERAL COMPARISON OF HIROSHIMA AND NAGASAKI GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF DAMAGE CAUSED BY THE ATOMIC EXPLOSIONS TOTAL CASUALTIES THE NATURE OF AN ATOMIC EXPLOSION CHARACTERISTICS OF THE DAMAGE CAUSED BY THE ATOMIC BOMBS CALCULATIONS OF THE PEAK PRESSURE OF THE BLAST WAVE LONG RANGE BLAST DAMAGE GROUND SHOCK SHIELDING, OR SCREENING, FROM THE BLAST FLASH BURN CHARACTERISTICS OF INJURIES TO PERSONS BURNS MECHANICAL INJURIES BLAST INJURIES RADIATION INJURIES SHIELDING FROM RADIATION EFFECTS OF THE ATOMIC BOMBINGS ON THE INHABITANTS OF THE CITIES APPENDIX: Father Siemes' eyewitness account FOREWORD This report describes the effects of the atomic bombs which were dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6 and 9, 1945

65. WW2-GEN
Road Builders Black Engineers in World War II. The Women's Army Corps A Commemorationof World War II 1944, History of USASOS (United States Army Services of
http://history.acusd.edu/gen/WW2Timeline/cmh.html
U.S. Army Center of Military History
Published Material GENERAL AMERICAN THEATER
ASIATIC-PACIFIC THEATER EUROPEAN-AFRICAN-MIDDLE EASTERN THEATER The Ardennes: Battle of the Bulge Cross-Channel Attack Omaha Beachhead (6 June-13 June 1944) St-Lo (7 July - 19 July 1944) ... World War II: The War Against Germany and Italy
(an extract from American Military History Archival Material GENERAL

66. American Indian Science And Engineering Society - AISES
a wide variety of occupations throughout the United States. Johnny Duplantis (UnitedHouma Nation) Alaska CoordinatorArchaeologist, US Army Corps of Engineers
http://www.aises.org/about/people/govcouncil.html
AISES About AISES People Background The Government Relations Council (GRC), established in 1984 is comprised of government employees throughout the United States. The GRC works to establish working relationships between AISES and government agencies. The GRC meets twice a year at the site of the AISES Annual Conference. Purpose In order to increase the representation of American Indian students in the science and engineering fields, the purpose of the GRC is to identify government resources, develop strategies, and promote government careers. Goals
  • To place American Indians into government jobs by working closely with the AISES student chapters, tribal colleges and other colleges with high American Indian enrollment. To coordinate and participate in government sponsored workshops at the National AISES Conference and Regional Conferences. To provide information on GRC activities. This includes the development of news items for publication in the Winds of Change magazine and to share information on agency American Indian programs.

67. Civilians Take Charge Of Nuclear Energy
II as part of the US Army Corps of Engineers Many young American scientists and Engineersworked for procedures are performed each year in the United States.
http://www.anl.gov/OPA/news96arch/news960101.html
Argonne at 50
Nuclear energy: the civilians take charge
ARGONNE, Ill. (Jan. 1, 1996) Argonne National Laboratory celebrates its 50th anniversary in 1996, but it was actually a key presidential decision 49 New Years Eves ago that shaped the future of Argonne and the entire national laboratory system. Before he left the Oval Office to celebrate New Year's Eve on Dec. 31, 1946, President Harry S Truman signed an executive order that transferred the wartime Manhattan Engineering District, the project that developed the atomic bomb, from military to civilian control, effective that midnight. The president's signature opened the path to today's system of government-sponsored research and development a system that has produced advances in virtually every area of science and technology over the last five decades. These advances have in turn led to countless industrial and commercial benefits that have touched the lives of every American. The Manhattan District was established during World War II as part of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to "carry on special work assigned to it." That meant military-related research, including the first controlled and sustained nuclear chain reaction that led to the atomic bomb. Led by Gen. Leslie Groves, the Manhattan Engineering District brought together many of the finest scientific minds of North America and Western Europe. Many young American scientists and engineers worked for and studied under these nuclear pioneers.

68. The Castle Online - Colonel's Corner
who would harm us for no other reason than the United States stands as dispatchedto New York and the Pentagon, as US Army Corps of Engineers mobile command
http://144.3.144.48/castle/911.htm
Photo by Jonas Jordan
September 11, 2001, commemoration program in Telfair Square. District team members participate in Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag. Features
District pauses to remember Sept. 11
By Mindy Anderson The leaves of the live oaks glistened brilliantly in Telfair Square Sept. 11 as more than 300 Savannah District team members gathered, united in purpose, during the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Savannah District 9/11 Commemoration Program to remember the victims of last year’s horrific terrorist attacks against this nation. District members also gathered to remember those in and out of uniform who continue the fight against those who would harm us for no other reason than the United States stands as a bright shining light of freedom in the world. With a noticeable sense of honor and patriotism, Betty Odom, Construction Division, set in motion the day’s inspirational and introspective overtone with an awe-inspiring acappela performance of Irving Berlin’s “God Bless America,” which was followed by a heartfelt invocation offered by Fred Blackburn, chief, CADD/GIS. After receiving the invocation, and before leading attendees in reciting the pledge of allegiance to the flag, Col. Roger A. Gerber, commander and district engineer, Savannah District, drew everyone’s attention to the American flag that was posted on the stage. It, along with others like it, was raised and lowered at the Pentagon Aug. 30 and then given to the district and other military organizations across the country to commemorate Sept. 11.

69. New Laboratory Forged "The Army Way"
The manufacturers of bathtubs in the United States had ceased There are enough jokesabout the Army way so you can on the company through the Corps of Engineers
http://www.lanl.gov/worldview/welcome/history/13_lab-forged.html
An old technical area, above. An early Los Alamos housing area below. Note the lack of paved roads.
New Laboratory Forged
"The Army Way"
Although the Los Alamos Ranch School in New Mexico provided some housing and office facilities, the new Los Alamos Laboratory required a whole new set of technical buildings as well as barracks, family housing and office space. And although Manhattan Engineer District commander Gen. Leslie Groves found the site ideal from the security point of view and the scientific director, J. Robert Oppenheimer of the University of California, Berkeley, found it idyllic as a retreat for scientists, those who had to build the Laboratory had great difficulty. Located several thousand feet above the Rio Grande valley, far from sources of labor and construction materials, 40 miles from the nearest railroad, accessible only by totally inadequate roads, with insufficient water, no natural gas and a limited electrical supply, Los Alamos presented a real challenge to those who had to make the soldiers' and scientists' plans a reality. The MED's site report, written in November 1942, predicted most of the problems. It was ignored, in the interests of time. Less than a week after it was written, Groves ordered the construction of barracks, a mess hall, officers' quarters, laboratory administration and technical buildings, a theater, an infirmary, apartments, utilities, streets and fencing. Some $26 million was spent on construction in Los Alamos during the war, approximately $200 million in today's dollars. Without a doubt, it would have been cheaper to build in almost any other location.

70. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
boats were seven vessels owned by the United States Army Corps of Engineers. TheCorps deployed surveyors to assist the city’s Engineers in evaluating
http://www.house.gov/transportation/water/02-27-02/flowers.html
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS COMPLETE STATEMENT OF LIEUTENANT GENERAL ROBERT B. FLOWERS CHIEF OF ENGINEERS U. S. ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS BEFORE THE SUBCOMMITTEE ON WATER RESOURCES AND THE ENVIRONMENT COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORTATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ON THE CIVIL WORKS PROGRAM BUDGET FISCAL YEAR 2003 FEBRUARY 27, 2002
Mr. Chairman, and Members of the Subcommittee: INTRODUCTION I am honored to be testifying to your subcommittee today, along with the Assistant Secretary of the Army (Civil Works), the Honorable Mike Parker, on the President's Fiscal Year 2003 (FY03) Budget for the United States Army Corps of Engineers’ Civil Works Program. I am especially honored to have the opportunity to lead the Corps through its current challenges to serve this great nation in meeting its many water and related land resources management needs. Thanks to this subcommittee’s support, the Civil Works Program remains strong, balanced, responsive, and highly productive. I look forward to working with you in furtherance of our partnership in prosecuting this fine program, so broadly beneficial to our nation.

71. Nichols' Long Citation
General Nichols graduated from the United States Military Academy was commissionedin the Corps of Engineers immediately assigned to the Army Engineer battalion
http://www.aog.usma.edu/AOG/AWARDS/DGA/96-Nichols.htm
CITATION KENNETH DAVID NICHOLS
As a distinguished Army engineer whose brilliant leadership, outstanding knowledge, sound judgment, and daring imagination in the new and uncharted field of atomic energy and atomic weapons made possible the preeminence of the United States during the early years of the Cold War; as a widely respected expert in the field of hydraulic engineering; and as an internationally recognized authority on the peaceful uses of atomic energy, Kenneth David Nichols has served his country with distinction in a wide variety of endeavors during a career spanning seven decades. Born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1907, General Nichols graduated from the United States Military Academy in 1929. He was commissioned in the Corps of Engineers, and reported to Fort Humphreys (now Fort Belvoir) Virginia as a second lieutenant in September 1929. Lieutenant Nichols was immediately assigned to the Army Engineer battalion in Nicaragua for survey work on the proposed Nicaraguan Interoceanic Canal. For his efforts during and after the Managua earthquake in March 1931, he was awarded the Nicaraguan Medal of Merit. From 1931 until 1933, General (then Lieutenant) Nichols attended Cornell University where he received the degree of Civil Engineer and a Master's degree in Civil Engineering. From 1933 until the summer of 1934 he was Assistant Director of the Waterways Experiment Station at Vicksburg, Mississippi. A year later, the War Department sent General Nichols to the Technische Hochschule in Berlin, Germany under a fellowship from the Institute of International Education for the purpose of studying European hydraulic research.

72. OAC:
United States and Mexico. International Water Commission. United Statesand Mexico. Union Oil Company. US Corps of Engineers (Army).
http://findaid.oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3h4nb0ks
Lippincott (Joseph B.) Papers Finding Aids Browse UC Berkeley Water Resources Center Archives Lippincott (Joseph B.) Papers
Lippincott (Joseph B.) Papers
View options: Standard Entire finding aid (829K bytes) Contents: Descriptive Summary Administrative Information Scope and Content Access points Preface ... Miscellaneous Photographs
Descriptive Summary
Title:
Joseph Barlow Lippincott Papers, 1882-1942 Collection number:
LIPP Creator:
Lippincott, Joseph Barlow, 1864-1942
Extent:
ca. 42 linear ft. (86 boxes)
Repository:
Water Resources Center Archives (Calif.)

Berkeley, California 94720-1718

Shelf location:
Water Resources Center Archives Related Links: Lippincott Aqueduct Photographs at WRCA: Lippincott Archival Collection at WRCA: To access these materials, please contact the contributing institution: UC Berkeley, Water Resources Center Archives Comments? Questions? The Online Archive of California (OAC) is an initiative of the California Digital Library

73. 1
US Army Corps of Engineers. Adverse Environmental Effects Direct impacts of the proposalto jurisdictional waters of the United States are approximately 1.0
http://www.lrc.usace.army.mil/co-r/201008.htm

74. 50 Facts About U.S. Nuclear Weapons
Thru December 1962, p. 8; US Army Corps of Engineers nuclear warheads requested bythe Army in 1956 compensation paid by the the United States to Marshallese
http://www.brook.edu/dybdocroot/FP/PROJECTS/NUCWCOST/50.HTM
Return to the Brookings Home Page
The U.S. Nuclear Weapons Cost Study Project
50 Facts About U.S. Nuclear Weapons
- Except where noted all figures are in constant 1996 dollars -
1. Cost of the Manhattan Project (through August 1945): SOURCES: Richard G. Hewlett and Oscar E. Anderson, Jr., The New World: A History of the United States Atomic Energy Commission, Volume 1, 1939/1946 (Oak Ridge, Tennessee: U.S. AEC Technical Information Center, 1972), pp. 723-724; Condensed AEC Annual Financial Report, FY 1953 (in Fifteenth Semiannual Report of the Atomic Energy Commission , January 1954, p. 73) 2. Total number of nuclear missiles built, 1951-present: U.S. Nuclear Weapons Cost Study Project 3. Estimated construction costs for more than 1,000 ICBM launch pads and silos, and support facilities, from 1957-1964: nearly $14,000,000,000 Maj. C.D. Hargreaves, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Ballistic Missile Construction Office (CEBMCO), "Introduction to the CEBMCO Historical Report and History of the Command Section, Pre-CEBMCO Thru December 1962," p. 8; U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Ballistic Missile Construction Office, "U.S. Air Force ICBM Construction Program," undated chart (circa 1965) 4. Total number of nuclear bombers built, 1945-present:

75. Nat'l Academies Press, Memorial Tributes: (2002), Kenneth D. Nicholas
professor of mechanics at the United States Military Academy at to the US delegationto the United Nations Atomic Coal Company; the US Army Corps of Engineers
http://www.nap.edu/books/0309084571/html/182.html
Memorial Tributes: National Academy of Engineering, Volume 10
National Academy of Engineering ( NAE
Related Books

Openbook Linked Table of Contents Front Matter, pp. i-xii Frederic W. Albaugh, pp. 1-7 Harvey O. Banks, pp. 8-13 Melvin L. Baron, pp. 14-17 Milo C. Bell, pp. 18-23 J. Lewis Blackburn, pp. 24-27 J. Keith Brimacombe, pp. 28-33 Gordon S. Brown, pp. 34-39 John D. Caplan, pp. 40-47 Wallace L. Chadwick, pp. 48-53 Julian D. Cole, pp. 54-59 Alfred R. Cooper, Jr., pp. 60-65 Georges A. Deschamps, pp. 66-69 J. Presper Eckert, pp. 70-75 Howard W. Emmons, pp. 76-81 Eugene G. Fubini, pp. 82-85 Donald F. Galloway, pp. 86-93 H. Joseph Gerber, pp. 94-99 Edward L. Ginzton, pp. 100-105 John V. N. Granger, pp. 110-113 John E. Gray, pp. 114-119 Richard W. Hamming, pp. 120-125 N. Bruce Hannay, pp. 126-131 Clair A. Hill, pp. 132-135 Nicholas J. Hoff, pp. 136-139 Hoyt C. Hottel, pp. 140-145 George R. Irwin, pp. 146-153 Burgess H. Jennings, pp. 154-157 Robert A. Laudise, pp. 158-163 Hans List, pp. 164-167 Harvard Lomax, pp. 168-173 Albert G. Mumma, pp. 174-177 Ryoichi Nakagawa, pp. 178-181

76. 11-10
With the United States entry into the war after construction and production organization,the Army turned to in the facilities of the Corps' division engineer
http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/wwii/11-9/11-10.htm
MANHATTAN: THE ARMY AND THE ATOMIC BOMB . By Vincent C. Jones . (1985, 1988; 660 pages, 7 maps, 3 tables, 5 charts, 93 illustrations, appendix, bibliographical note, glossaries, index, CMH Pub 11-10.) This volume describes the U.S. Army's key role in the formation and administration of the Manhattan Project, the World War II organization which produced the Page 142 atomic bomb that contributed significantly to ending the conflict with Japan and marked the beginning of the postwar atomic era. It relates how the Army, starting in 1939, became increasingly involved in the research activities initiated by American and refugee scientists into the military potentialities of atomic energy, spurred on by the conviction that the Axis powers already had under way programs for the development of atomic weapons. With the United States entry into the war after the attack on Pearl Harbor (1941 ) as an active participant, America's wartime leaders took immediate measures to expand the research and industrial efforts required to develop atomic weapons. To administer this enlarged program, they turned to the Army as the organization best suited to cope with its special security, priority, manpower, and other problems in an economy geared to all-out war production. This history of the Manhattan Project takes a broadly chronological approach but with topical treatment of detailed developments. The focus of the narrative is from the vantage point of the Manhattan Project organization, as it functioned under the direction of Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves and such key scientific administrators as Vannevar Bush, James B. Conant, Arthur Compton, and J. Robert Oppenheimer, responding to policies originating at the top levels of the wartime leadership. The volume begins with a prologue designed to provide the reader with a brief survey of the history of atomic energy, explaining in layman's terms certain technical aspects of atomic science.

77. EPA: Federal Register: Intent To Prepare A Draft Environmental Impact Statement
Chief, Dam Safety and Support Section, Geotechnical Branch, US Army Corps of Engineers 1.The Kansas City District (KCD), Corps of Engineers, is undertaking
http://www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-IMPACT/2000/July/Day-11/i17506.htm
Federal Register Environmental Documents Recent Additions Contact Us Print Version Search: EPA Home Federal Register FR Years FR Months ...
and Regulations
Intent To Prepare a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for a Dam Safety Assurance Study, Tuttle Creek Lake Project, Manhattan, Kansas
EPA Home Privacy and Security Notice Contact Us

78. DE - History
real estate services for the Army and Air was designated as the single Corps designand major construction projects program for the continental United States.
http://www.nws.usace.army.mil/PublicMenu/Menu.cfm?sitename=DE&pagename=history

79. War On Terrorism
11, his 11 Corps of Engineers boats, which normally was a drastic change in a 24yearArmy career that They gain an understanding of the United States, he said
http://www.azstarnet.com/attack/indepth/id-0215wtc.html
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VIEW FORECAST
main anthrax archive ... Contact us Feb. 15, 2002
Army veteran leads Corps of Engineers in Ground Zero cleanup
By Tom Davis
KNIGHT RIDDER NEWSPAPERS But the Bergenfield, N.J., native did just what his military training had prepared him for: He got to work. At the time, he was in the 24th year of an Army career that bounced him from Honduras to South Korea to Haiti, but only two months into his job as the leader of the Army Corps of Engineers' New York and New Jersey district. He was the new man in an agency that cleans Superfund sites, regulates pollution in rivers, and manages flooding. He had a staff of 656, and 650 of them were civilians with jobs such as driving boats, preparing maps, and supervising the dredging of waterways.

80. U
lieutenant general (United States) marine Corps major general alabama (UnitedStates) more Army flags (United States) nantucket, massachusetts
http://www.flags-by-swi.com/fotw/flags/keywordu.html
U
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