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DBRMK0 Scale model of 'The Gadget', first nuclear device tested at Trinity Site in 1945, Bradbury Science Museum, Los Alamos, NM, USA
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BRB1R6 New Mexico near the site of the A bomb tests
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A87M7A White Sands National Monument, New Mexico, USA
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A5WRCB White Sands National Monument, New Mexico, USA
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2K0M15G The gypsum dune fields of White Sands National Monument in New Mexico, backed by the San Andres Mountains
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2K0M15A The gypsum dune fields of White Sands National Monument in New Mexico, backed by the San Andres Mountains
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2K0M155 White Sands National Monument in New Mexico
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3AEG37Y Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima still burns, maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico. PHOTO: Thomas Tanemori, a survivor (hibakusha) of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. He was 8 years old and was 0.7 mile fr
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3AEG360 Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG343 Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG35H Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG36N Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG355 Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG33H Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima still burns, maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico. PHOTO: Thomas Tanemori, a survivor (hibakusha) of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. He was 8 years old and was 0.7 mile fr
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3AEG32Y Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG33F Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima still burns, maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico. PHOTO: Thomas Tanemori, a survivor (hibakusha) of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. He was 8 years old and was 0.7 mile fr
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3AEG36Y Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG353 Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG34W Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG33P Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima still burns, maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico. PHOTO: Thomas Tanemori, a survivor (hibakusha) of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. He was 8 years old and was 0.7 mile fr
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3AEG35C Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG34Y Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG340 Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame, ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima, still burns. Maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu for the past sixty years. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey through more then 250 communities as they walk to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico, site of the first Atomic detonation. Proc
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3AEG34H Jul 16, 2005; San Francisco, CA, USA; Japanese Buddhist monks bring the 'Atomic Flame' to the U.S. to mark the sixtieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The flame ignited from burning ashes at Hiroshima still burns, maintained at a monastery on the island of Kyushu. The monks were met in San Francisco by atomic bomb survivors, Native Americans, and peace groups of all faiths for their final 1600 mile journey to the Trinity Test Site in Alamogordo, New Mexico. PHOTO: Thomas Tanemori, a survivor (hibakusha) of the Hiroshima atomic bomb. He was 8 years old and was 0.7 mile fr
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2JDE0N6 Trinitite. minerals. North America; USA; New Mexico; Socorro County; Bingham, White Sands Missile Range; Trinity Site
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HRNT3M Kenneth Bainbridge, American Physicist
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AH1X1P The gypsum dune fields of White Sands National Monument in New Mexico, backed by the San Andres Mountains
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ADN3X1 A plaque commemorates the first test of an Atomic Bomb at the trinity site in New Mexico
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Total de Resultados: 28

Página 1 de 1