The Secret "Green Run" Experiments on Washington
The physicists who invented the nuclear bomb worked out of
Los Alamos in New Mexico, but the people who did the dirty work of making the
bombs were in Hanford, Washington. Throughout the Cold War, Hanford churned out
plutonium for our nuclear arsenal. It was also, conveniently, a place to
experiment with radiation.
Today, Hanford is the most contaminated radioactive site in
America—the site of a massive (and troubled) cleanup effort. Radioactive
material is still accidentally leaking into the ground. Though Hanford’s plants
routinely released small doses of radioactive material into the air, most of
this damage came from an event in 1949 called Green Run.
Green Run was a secret Air Force experiment that released
Hanford’s largest single dose of radioactive iodine-131. On the night of
December 2, 1949, at the behest of the military, scientists at Hanford let
7,000 to 12,000 curies of iodine-131 into the air, where it rode the wind as
far as 200 miles. For a sense of scale, the Three Mile Island nuclear power
plant accident released an estimated 15 to 24 curies of iodine-131 and the
Chernobyl accident 35 million to 49 million curies.
The Green Run stayed secret until the 1980s, when it was
revealed by Freedom of Information Act requests from local newspapers. The
military details are still classified. More than half a century later,
suspicion and controversy continue to lurk around Green Run, especially among the
residents who lived downwind of Hanford.
There’s still much that we don’t know about the Green Run,
but here is what we do.
Hanford, Factory & Farm
When Hanford broke ground in 1943, residents nearby in
eastern Washington knew it was a war construction project but not much else.
Under the then-secret Manhattan Project, Hanford’s reactors produced the
plutonium for the first nuclear bomb, detonated at the Trinity site in 1945,
and Fat Man, dropped on Nagasaki. Only after the war was Hanford’s true purpose
widely known.
As the U.S. entered the Cold War, Hanford grew. Its nine
reactors together processed enough plutonium for 60,000 bombs. Rural eastern
Washington became the Atomic Frontier.
Hanford was always more than a production facility; it was
also a research complex. Up to 1,000 animals were housed on a farm near reactor
F for experiments on the effects of radiation. The animals included fish, dogs,
pigs, sheep, and even alligators. Sheep, especially, were given feed with
iodine-131, the same radioactive material that the reactors were discharging
into the air.
Spying on the Soviets
The “Green Run” sounds benign, even pleasant, but its name
has more dangerous origins. Normally, irradiated uranium fuel is cooled for up
to 101 days before it is processed, so that short-lived radioactive elements
like iodine can decay. In the Green Run, the fuel was cooled just 16 days; it
was still “green.”
Carl Gamertsfleder, then Hanford’s Health Instruments Deputy
Chief, later told the Spokane Chronicle, that the “green” order came from the
military, who assumed the Soviets were rushing to produce nuclear bombs. If the
Soviets were short-cooling their fuels, the radioactive results might be
spotted some distance away. So Air Force wanted to fly planes behind a
radioactive test plume, to test out their own instruments.
That’s why, on the night of December 2, 1949, Hanford
employees processed one ton of 16-day-old fuel without filtering the exhaust,
releasing 7,000 to 12,000 curies of iodine-131 in the air. It was two to three
times as much as they intended. The experiment also went forward despite,
Gamertsfleder claimed, reservations about weather. “We knew what the weather
was and we didn’t want the release to be done then,” he told the Chronicle, “On
the Columbia River it probably got as many people as it could.”
The radioactive iodine-131 spread over a 200-by-40 mile
plume, which was, actually, too small. That meant much of the iodine-131 made
it onto the ground, in higher than desired concentrations. The vegetation in
nearby communities had readings of 0.1 to 4.3 microcuries/kg, ten to hundreds
of times higher than the “permissible permanent concentration.”
Downwinders
In the decades since, committees and researchers have
revisited the question of whether the Green Run’s iodine-131 endangered the
health of people living downwind. The answer, according to official sources, is
no.
Iodine travels through tainted food and milk, and the Green
Run happened in winter, when few people were harvesting vegetables from the
ground and few cows were grazing. A Congressionally mandated study could not
find a link between thyroid disease caused by iodine-131 and releases of the
material by Hanford, during the Green Run or otherwise.
But, as secret government experiments do, the Green Run bred
suspicion and mistrust. In 2005, a lawsuit filed on behalf of 2,300 downwinders
finally had its had in court. Of the first six plaintiffs, two who had thyroid
cancer were awarded $500,000 in damages—too little for the rest of the cases to
continue.
That’s pretty much where the story ends with the Green Run,
a largely-forgotten episode of history in a largely-forgotten place. But
Hanford still bears the scars of the Cold War, and the Green Run is an
unsettling example of what the government has done in the name of keeping its
citizens safe.
See you all tomorrow.
Buh-bye.
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