Futurity

Glassy beads on Hiroshima beaches came from nuclear blast

Glassy debris from the atomic bomb that devastated Hiroshima at the end of WWII still exists on beaches near the city.
Itsukushima Shrine

Minuscule glassy beads formed from debris of the atomic bomb blast that devastated Hiroshima nearly 75 years ago litter nearby beaches, according to a new study.

The beads, which no one seems to have noticed until now, apparently formed in the atomic cloud from melted or vaporized concrete, marble, stainless steel, and rubber, among other materials of daily life in Hiroshima. The researchers estimate that a square kilometer (0.4 square mile) of beach sand collected from a depth of about 4 inches would contain about 2,200 to 3,100 tons of the particles.

“This was the worst man-made event ever, by far,” says Mario Wannier, a retired geologist from Berkeley Lab who led the study. “In the surprise of finding these particles, the big question for me was, you have a city, and a minute later you have no city… Where is the city? Where is the material? It is a trove to have discovered these particles. It is an incredible story.”

glassy beads from Hiroshima beaches
Examples of the broad range of particles that researchers collected from beach sands in Japan’s Motoujima Peninsula. They range from clear glass (A-E) and glass-covered debris (I-J) to rubber-like (L) and iron (M) particles. White scale bar is 1 mm; red scale bar is 0.5 mm; yellow scale bar is 0.2 mm. (Credit: Berkeley Lab)

The fission bomb an American bomber dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945, instantly killed more than 70,000 people, while an equal number died afterward from radiation effects. The bomb and resulting firestorms mostly leveled an area measuring more than 4 square miles and destroyed or damaged an estimated 90 percent of the structures in the city. The US dropped a second bomb on the city of Nagasaki three days later, bringing a tragic end to World War II.

Wannier first noticed the irregularly shaped glass beads in 2015, while combing through beach sand his colleague Marc de Urreiztieta collected from Japan’s Motoujina Peninsula, about four miles from Hiroshima. Wannier studies sand around the world to monitor the health of local marine environments.

He thought the unusual particles, measuring .5 to 1 millimeter across, resembled glassy beads resulting from meteor impacts, such as the one that killed off the dinosaurs 66 million years ago. So, he teamed up with mineralogist Rudy Wenk to analyze the beads using electron microscopy and X-ray microdiffraction at the Berkeley Lab’s Advanced Light Source.

Wenk found a wide variety of chemical compositions in the samples, including aluminum, silicon, and calcium; microscopic globules of chromium-rich iron; and microscopic branching of crystalline structures. Other beads were composed mostly of carbon and oxygen.

“Some of these look similar to what we have from meteorite impacts, but the composition is quite different,” says Wenk, a professor of the graduate school in the earth and planetary science department at UC Berkeley and a Berkeley Lab affiliate. “There were quite unusual shapes. There was some pure iron and steel. Some of these had the composition of building materials.”

The experiments and related analyses determined that the particles had formed in extreme conditions, with temperatures exceeding 3,300 degrees Fahrenheit (1,800 Celsius). The composition and formation led the researchers to conclude that they were formed in the bomb blast.

“It was quite fascinating to look at all of these materials,” Wenk says, noting that the beads may be radioactive. “What we hope is to get other people interested in looking at this in more detail and in looking for examples around the Nagasaki A-bomb site.”

The findings appear in the journal Anthropocene.

Source: UC Berkeley

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