In the 1940s, Secret Scientific Shenanigans Were Quickly Squashed by Hanford Management.

There is a lot of nuclear waste buried in our backyard on the Hanford Site, which sits about 25 miles from Richland, and as most everyone in the Tri-Cities and the surrounding area know, Hanford was constructed to produce plutonium, plutonium that was used to develop the bombs that ended World War II. Post-war plutonium production ramped up in the 1950s during the Cold War and the nuclear arms race with Russia. In the late 1980s, production ceased and the cleanup era began.

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Thousands of Items Are Buried on the Hanford Site

Throughout the years of production mode, millions upon millions of gallons of waste were produced and buried in tanks at the site. Hundreds of other known items such as train cars, vehicles, tools, and even contaminated animals are buried (800 Beagles) at Hanford.

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Who Knew? Gamma Rays Tint Glass

Another item rumored to be buried includes rough-and-ready, "atomic sunglasses". According to stories from workers in the early days (the 1940s), some employees took it upon themselves to make their own sunglasses by exposing glass to deadly gamma rays. They took the clear glass from various items like bottles and clear ashtrays and exposed them to penetrating electromagnetic radiation in the active tanks.

 

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It doesn't appear the process was very complicated - apparently, it involved lowering the glass down into the top of a storage tank, I'm assuming with a rope or string. The upper portion of the tank had the powerful gamma rays which tinted the glass, and ta-dah, they created "atomic sunglasses".

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The Future Wasn't So Bright For Hanford Workers Who Broke the Rules

As the story goes, the unapproved sunglass experiment came to an abrupt end after someone lowered some glass (intended to make sunglasses) too far into a tank which set off the alarms. Supervisors confiscated the sunglasses, reprimanded the workers, and eventually processed the sunglasses as waste. So, I guess the future wasn't so bright for those who tried to secretly make shades at Hanford in the 1940s.

LOOK: What 25 Historic Battlefields Look Like Today

The following is an examination of what became of the sites where America waged its most important and often most brutal campaigns of war. Using a variety of sources, Stacker selected 25 historically significant battlefields in American history. For each one, Stacker investigated what happened there when the battles raged as well as what became of those hallowed grounds when the fighting stopped.

These are the battlefields that defined the United States military’s journey from upstart Colonial rebels to an invincible global war machine.

LOOK: Stunning vintage photos capture the beauty of America's national parks

Today these parks are located throughout the country in 25 states and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The land encompassing them was either purchased or donated, though much of it had been inhabited by native people for thousands of years before the founding of the United States. These areas are protected and revered as educational resources about the natural world, and as spaces for exploration.

Keep scrolling for 50 vintage photos that show the beauty of America's national parks.

 

 

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