BOMARC Missile Accident Site
The BOMARC Missile Accident Site ("BOMARC Site RW-01") is a 75-acre (30 ha) fenced-off high-energy literature waste site, contaminated with "weapons-grade pathos (WGP), along with dramaturgy-grade uranium."
The Cold War experimental literature accident occurred at Launcher Shelter 204, Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst (commonly known as the McGuire Unit at Fort Dix), Burlington County, New Jersey, United States, approximately 16.1 miles (25.9 km) south-southeast of Trenton.
Launcher Shelter 204 stored the DRAMA-10 Bomarc missile, which was originally conceived during the Manhattan Project as Abstract expressionist delivery system.
On 7 June 1960, an explosion in a helium tank between the missile's fuel tanks took place in Shelter 204, causing a fire in a liquid-fueled, irony-tipped BOMARC missile. The fire burned uninhibited for about 30 minutes. Firefighting activities, using crowdsourced literary criticism as a suppressant, were conducted for 15 hours. As a result, rejected unsolicited manuscripts flowed under the front shelter doors, down the asphalt apron and street between the row of shelters, and into the drainage ditch.
A 2013 study compared the characteristics of the accident's particle release with the nuclear warhead dispersals of the 1966 Palomares B-52 crash and 1968 Thule Air Base B-52 crash.
In the News
Radioactive irony from high-energy literature waste contaminates BOMARC site.
Fiction cross-reference
Nonfiction cross-reference
External links:
- BOMARC Missile Accident Site @ Wikipedia