Official name | Bikini Atoll |
---|---|
Other name | Pikinni Atoll |
Native name | |
Settlement type | Atoll |
Motto | |
Flag size | 180px |
Map caption | Map of the Marshall Islands show Bikini |
Image map1 | Bikini 2244493428 13643c6505 o.jpg |
Mapsize1 | 180px |
Map caption1 | Map of Bikini Atoll |
Dot x | |dot_y |
Pushpin map | |
Pushpin label position | |
Pushpin mapsize | |
Subdivision type | Country |
Subdivision name | Republic of the Marshall Islands |
Subdivision name2 | |
Leader title1 | |
Established title | |
Established date | |
Unit pref | Imperial |
Area land sq mi | 2.3 |
Area water percent | |
Population total | Uninhabited |
Population density sq mi | |
Coordinates type | region:MH_type:isle |
Coordinates display | inline,title |
Elevation footnotes | |
Elevation ft | |
Postal code type | |
Footnotes | |
Website | }} |
Bikini Atoll (pronounced or ; Marshallese: , ) is a World Heritage listed atoll in the Micronesian Islands of the Pacific Ocean, part of Republic of the Marshall Islands.
It consists of 23 islands surrounding a deep central lagoon, at the northern end of the Ralik Chain (approximately northwest of Ailinginae Atoll and northwest of Majuro), now universally significant to the world as follows:
"Bikini Atoll has conserved direct tangible evidence .. conveying the power of .. nuclear tests, i.e. the sunken ships sent to the bottom of the lagoon by the tests in 1946 and the gigantic Bravo crater.... Through its history, the atoll symbolises the dawn of the nuclear age, despite its paradoxical image of peace and of earthly paradise."
Within Bikini Atoll, Bikini Island is the northeastern most and largest islet, measuring long. About twelve kilometres to the northwest is the islet of Aomen. As part of the Pacific Proving Grounds it was the site of more than 20 nuclear weapons tests between 1946 and 1958.
The first Westerner to see the atoll, in the mid-1820s, was the Russian captain and explorer Otto von Kotzebue, who named the atoll Eschscholtz Atoll after the Russian scientist Johann Friedrich von Eschscholtz. The atoll, however, has always been called Bikini by the native Marshall Islanders, from Marshallese "''Pik''" meaning "surface" and "''Ni''" meaning "coconut". The name was popularized in the United States not only by nuclear bomb tests, but because the bikini swimsuit was named after the island in 1946. The two-piece swimsuit was introduced within days of the first nuclear test on the atoll, when the name of the island was in the news. Introduced just weeks after the one-piece "Atome" was widely advertised as the "smallest bathing suit in the world", it was said that the bikini "split the atome".
Following the end of World War II, Bikini came under the control of the United States as part of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands until the independence of the Marshall Islands in 1986.
Between 1946 and 1958, twenty-three nuclear devices were detonated at Bikini Atoll, beginning with the Operation Crossroads series in July 1946. Preceding the nuclear tests, the indigenous population was relocated to Rongerik Atoll, though during the Castle Bravo detonation in particular some members of the population were exposed to nuclear fallout (see Project 4.1 for a discussion of the health effects). For examination of the fallout, several sounding rockets of the types Loki and Asp were launched at .
The March 1, 1954 detonation codenamed Castle Bravo, was the first test of a practical hydrogen bomb. The largest nuclear explosion ever set off by the United States, it was much more powerful than predicted, and created widespread radioactive contamination.
Among those contaminated were the 23 crewmembers of the Japanese fishing boat ''Daigo Fukuryū Maru''. The ensuing scandal in Japan was enormous, and ended up inspiring the 1954 film ''Godzilla'', in which the 1954 U.S. nuclear test awakens and mutates the monster, who then attacks Japan before finally being vanquished by Japanese ingenuity.
The Micronesian inhabitants, who numbered about 200 before the United States relocated them after World War II, ate fish, shellfish, bananas, and coconuts. A large majority of the Bikinians were moved to Kili Island as part of their temporary homestead, but remain there today and receive compensation from the United States government for their survival.
In 1968 the United States declared Bikini habitable and started bringing a small group of Bikinians back to their homes in the early 1970s as a test. In 1978, however, the islanders were removed again when strontium-90 in their bodies reached dangerous levels after a French team of scientists did additional tests on the island. It was not uncommon for women to experience faulty pregnancies, miscarriages, stillbirths and damage to their offspring as a result of the nuclear testing on Bikini. The United States provided $150 million as a settlement for damages caused by the nuclear testing program.
Since the early 1980s the leaders of the Bikinian community have insisted that, because of what happened in the 1970s with the aborted return to their atoll, they want the entire island of Bikini excavated and the soil removed to a depth of about . Scientists involved with the Bikinians have stressed that while the excavation method would rid the island of the Cesium-137, the removal of the topsoil would severely damage the environment, turning it into a virtual wasteland of windswept sand. The Council, however, feeling a responsibility toward their people, has repeatedly contended that scraping Bikini is the only way to guarantee safe living conditions on the island for future generations.
Bikini Atoll was entered into the list of UNESCO World Heritage sites in August 2010.
Shipwrecks in the lagoon include:
The dose received from background radiation on the island was found to be between 2.4 mSv/year and 4.5 mSv/year (the lower rate is the same as natural background radiation) assuming that a diet of imported foods was available. But it was because of these food risks that the group eventually did not recommend fully resettling the island.
A 2002 survey found partial recovery of the corals inside The Bravo Crater. Zoe Richards of the ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies and James Cook University observed matrices of branching Porites coral up to 8 meters high.
als:Bikini-Atoll br:Enez Bikini bg:Бикини (атол) cs:Bikini cy:Atol Bikini da:Bikini-atollen de:Bikini-Atoll et:Bikini es:Atolón Bikini eu:Bikini atoloia fa:آبسنگ حلقوی بیکینی fr:Atoll de Bikini gl:Atol Bikini ko:비키니 환초 id:Atol Bikini it:Atollo di Bikini he:ביקיני (אטול) ka:ბიკინის ატოლი sw:Bikini (atolli) lb:Bikini-Atoll hu:Bikini-atoll mk:Бикини (атол) arz:اتول بيكينى nl:Bikini (atol) ja:ビキニ環礁 no:Bikiniatollen pl:Bikini (atol) pt:Atol de Bikini ksh:Bikini-Atoll ru:Бикини (атолл) sk:Atol Bikini fi:Bikinin atolli sv:Bikiniatollen uk:Бікіні (атол) vi:Đảo san hô Bikini zh:比基尼环礁
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