Navajo Nation Continues to Grapple With Legacy of Atomic Testing and Uranium Mining
3 Articles
3 Articles
Navajo Nation Continues to Grapple With Legacy of Atomic Testing and Uranium Mining
WINDOW ROCK, Ariz.—Maggie Billiman devoted her career to nursing and serving others, offering compassionate care to terminally ill patients during their final days. It was a journey filled with empathy and understanding. At the end of each patient’s life, Billiman held their hand and said a prayer to ease their suffering. There would come a time when she, too, would face the daunting prospect of a serious illness—one that she had spent so many y…
Navajo Nation Continues to Grapple With Legacy of Atomic Testing and Uranium Mining - The Thinking Conservative
A community gathering on June 10 voiced support for national adoption of renewed legislation that benefits cancer survivors decades after radiation exposure. The post Navajo Nation Continues to Grapple With Legacy of Atomic Testing and Uranium Mining appeared first on The Thinking Conservative.
This map was published in 1985 by Vincent C. Jones as part of his book Manhattan: The Army and the Atomic Bomb. It represents the site of the Trinity test in 1945. Trinity test was the first test of a nuclear weapon, carried out in New Mexico, United States. The choice of place required, for security reasons, a remote and unpopulated place, as well as flat and without structures that could be damaged. Also, they had little wind, to minimize the …
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