15 July 2001 Media Statement
An investigation has established the extent of New Zealand involvement in nuclear testing programmes during the 1950's,
the Minister of Veterans' Affairs Mark Burton announced today.
"Eleven individual New Zealand observers who witnessed British or American nuclear explosions have been identified,"
Mark Burton said. (This is in addition to the 528 Navy personnel who participated in the British nuclear testing
programme in the Pacific in 1957-58.) "A number of other New Zealanders visited nuclear test sites, but not during
actual tests.
"Of the eleven observers, six are still alive and are currently aged between 71 and 87. The other five men were aged 54,
59, 67, 71 and 81 at the time of their death.
"For privacy reasons, medical details will not be made public," Mark Burton said.
"However, the Ministry of Health advises that it is extremely unlikely that any of the recorded causes of death could be
linked to the observation of nuclear tests. Similarly, there is no suggestion of links with any specific existing
medical conditions.
"The surviving observers have been contacted and have been offered assistance through the Office of Veterans' Affairs.
In general they have expressed satisfaction with their current arrangements."
Mark Burton said that the Defence Force and Government of the time sought to have observers at the trials, so that New
Zealand could, in a time when Cold War attitudes prevailed, stay up to date with the development of nuclear technology.
"Those New Zealanders who attended the tests were mostly specialist officers, with a background in either science or
specialist weapons. They received briefings before and after the tests and reported their observations back to New
Zealand authorities.
"Recent attention has focused on what have become known as "clothing trials", which took place at Maralinga on the 30
September 1956. The investigation has established that only two New Zealanders took part in these trials. I note that
these two men have spoken publicly of their experiences.
"Further details on New Zealand's involvement are contained in the excellent report by Defence Force historian John
Crawford, which I am releasing today," Mark Burton said.
Ends
New Zealand Observers And Indoctrinees At
Nuclear Weapon Tests: 1956-1958
Introduction
In the first years of the nuclear age New Zealand supported the development of atomic and later thermonuclear weapons by
its allies the United States of America and Great Britain. Consistent with this policy the New Zealand Armed Forces
became involved in nuclear weapon testing. In 1952 Royal New Zealand Air Force aircraft based at Whenuapai assisted with
the monitoring of radioactive fallout from the first British atomic bomb test, which was conducted off the northwest
coast of Australia in October. As part of the fallout monitoring programme for the British tests in Australia, Royal New
Zealand Air Force personnel in Fiji collected rain-water samples. A small RAF detachment carried out the same task at
RNZAF Base Ohakea.
Maralinga 1956: Operation Buffalo and the Indoctrinee Force
Early in 1956 the New Zealand Chiefs of Staff learned that the British and Australian Governments planned to send a
large group of observers to the atomic weapon tests to be held at Maralinga in Australia, which had the codename
Operation Buffalo. Although the term ‘observer’ was used in the initial correspondence, the New Zealand authorities knew
that any personnel sent to take part in this programme would do more than simply observe the detonation of atomic bombs.
The New Zealand Chiefs of Staff considered that it would be useful for New Zealand to send a group of observers who
would “see and hear the atomic explosion and go back to their units able to pass on first-hand information of their
experience.” The Chiefs of Staff asked the British military authorities if New Zealand could send up to 20 personnel
from all three services to the test programme. The number of observers who could attend the tests was limited, but the
British authorities agreed to reduce the number of their observers so that five New Zealanders could take part.
Because land-based atomic tests were of most importance to the Army, it was decided to send three observers from the
Army, and one each from the Royal New Zealand Navy and Royal New Zealand Air Force. The New Zealand military authorities
received additional information in August 1956 about the objectives of the operation and the tasks to be undertaken by
the five officers sent to the Buffalo tests. The officers were to join the Indoctrinee Force (IF) and gain experience of
the effects of nuclear explosions, especially on weapons and equipment. This experience would then be passed on to their
colleagues. Before the test took place, they were to receive instruction on the purpose of the programme and how it was
to be conducted. The New Zealand authorities were also informed that all the officers would be “subject to radiation
hazard.” The Indoctrinee Force was a British Army initiative. The initial War Office paper on the subject noted that:
“there are at present practically no British Army officers who have any conception of what an atomic explosion is like,
whereas the Americans have already made use of atomic tests to indoctrinate whole formations of troops. We must at least
make a start in battle indoctrination with some of our future regimental and formation commanders”.
Five suitable officers were selected for the operation: Commander Logan Boyce Carey, RNZN, Lieutenant Colonel William
Richard Kimmit (Kim) Morrison, DSO, Lieutenant Colonel John (Blackie) Burns, DSO, MBE, Major Peter Hulbert Glenn
Hamilton and Flight Lieutenant Roger Hetherington Peart. Three of the officers (Carey, Hamilton and Peart) had science
degrees, while Morrison, who was Director of Infantry and Training, and Burns, who was Director of Artillery, held
positions at Army Headquarters that were central to the introduction of any new training programmes designed to take
account of the use of atomic weapons. The involvement of the New Zealand officers in the tests was approved by Thomas
Macdonald, the Minister of Defence, in June 1956.
The One Tree test, 27 September 1956
The five New Zealand officers arrived at Maralinga in South Australia on 28 August 1956. The Indoctrinee Force received
lectures from British experts on a wide range of topics related to the testing programme including blast, genetics,
nuclear physics, heat effects and decontamination. An important part of the test was the positioning at different
distances from ground zero (the point on the ground surface at, or directly below, the initiating point of a nuclear
explosion) of ‘target response items’: various structures, military equipment and weapons (including tanks and
aircraft), dummies dressed in military uniforms and live animals. The purpose of this part of the operation was to
obtain good data on the effects of atomic explosions. All five observed the first test in the series, which was
codenamed One Tree, at 1700 hours on 27 September 1956. The members of the Indoctrinee Force stood about 8.2 kilometres
from ground zero. This test involved the detonation of a 15-kiloton atomic bomb mounted on top of a 100-foot [30 metre]
tower. Five minutes before the detonation the indoctrinees were instructed to face away from the tower. At the moment of
detonation there was “a brilliant flash”, and “everything went quite white and dazzling.” The flash was accompanied by a
heatwave which Lieutenant Colonel Burns likened to the effect “you get when you open the oven door on the Sunday Roast”.
The officers were instructed to turn around two seconds after the detonation. They witnessed the “final stages of the
fireball and subsequent development of the typical mushroom cloud”.
On 28 and 29 September the Indoctrinee Force was divided up into parties of 14 each led by a well briefed officer to
examine the area around ground zero and in particular the blast’s effect on the military equipment, weapons and other
target response items. For this part of the operation the indoctrinees and the other personnel who accompanied them were
dressed in full protective clothing and respirators (cotton underclothes combination, white closely-woven cotton
protective suit, complete with hood, white rubber boots, respirator, white cotton gloves). The first group of
indoctrinees entered the target response area around ground zero 17 hours after the detonation. Each group of
indoctrinees was accompanied by a ‘Health Escort’ drawn from the testing organisation’s radiation safety team who was
equipped with a 1324 radiation dose rate survey meter and two pocket quartz-fibre dosimeters and checked radiation
levels during the tour. All members of the Indoctrinee Force carried film badges. They examined the circular area around
ground zero which had become a mass of fused sand and silica and various target response items. The tours lasted about
two and a half hours. The personnel were then decontaminated at a decontamination centre. “Each indoctrinee was first
monitored with contamination meters for clothing contamination levels. After the check all clothing was removed and a
second check made for skin contamination. This was followed by a shower and then a final check by a sensitive Geiger
counter to ensure complete decontamination.” After the first test Commander Carey and Lieutenant Colonel Morrison
returned to New Zealand.
The Contaminated Clothing Trial
The Atomic Weapons Establishment report on the Indoctrinee Force states that 18 of the force’s officers volunteered on
30 September to join six members of the War Office Radiac User Trials Team who were “to carry out tests on the
protective value of various types of clothing for military activities in the fall-out zone”. The report of the Royal
Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia also describes the men from Indoctrinee Force who took part in this
trial as volunteers. The New Zealand officers involved certainly did not sign any document stating that they had
volunteered to take part in this trial. Given the circumstances and the general way in which such matters were handled
at this time, it would have been unusual for them to have been asked to signify their agreement in writing. Lieutenant
Colonel Burns remarked not long after the tests that “I was invited along with others to don respirator and protective
clothing and join in the clothing trials.” More recently Burns has made the point that he and the other officers were
representing New Zealand, and he believed that they should be represented in as full as possible range of activities
during the testing operation. Peart has similar views remarking that he was one of “a number of officers all of whom
were representing a regiment, either British, Australian, and just we five New Zealanders and I don’t remember ever
being asked if we would like to go into a fallout area or anything like that. It was just part of the duty we had to
carry out.”
The contaminated clothing trial, which took place on 30 September, investigated how much protection three types of
protective clothing gave compared with standard military clothing. The details of the clothing to be worn by the men
engaged in the trial and the activities they were to undertake our set out in the following extract from a memorandum to
the Indoctrinee Force Commander:
Three groups of 8 men each, wearing respectively:
a. Battle dress serge (2)
b. Gabardine Combat suit (2)
c. Cotton Khaki drill (2)
d. AWRE Combination suits (2)
[In each group two men wore each sort of outfit, types A, B, C, D.]
All operate in a fall-out area on D1+3 in the following way:
a. Group I will drive through the area seated in a one-ton vehicle.
b. Group II will drive to a certain point, debus and march through the area, embus and drive home.
c. Group III will drive to the same point, debus and proceed through the area marching, crawling and forcing a way
through the undergrowth, embus and drive home.
………………
Dress
Type A
Battledress, battle order, boots, anklets web, cotton gloves, towels used as kerchiefs and head covering,
Service respirators.
Type B
Combat suit including hood, battle order, rubber boots and calf-length overshoes, cotton gloves and Service
respirators.
Type C
Khaki drill with bush jacket worn tucked into trousers, battle order, rubber boots and calf-length overshoes,
towels used as kerchiefs and head covering, Service respirators.
Type D
AWRE [Atomic Weapons Research Establishment] Combination suits with rubber boots and overshoes, cotton gloves
and Service respirators.
All types will wear AWRE combination underwear.
Personnel
Six members of the War Office Radiac User Trials Team will wear Type A clothing and act as Health escorts.
Eighteen members of the Indoctrinee Force will be required to wear Types, B, C and D clothing.
The two New Zealanders involved in the trial, Burns and Peart, were dressed in ‘Type D‘ clothing. Peart’s comments about
his involvement in this experiment strongly indicate that he was a member of Group II. It seems clear that Burns was a
member of Group III as shortly after returning to New Zealand he remarked that the group he was a member of “marched and
crawled along a dirt track for about an hour occasionally being showered with dust from a vehicle which was driven past
for that very purpose. I don’t think we went closer than 1/2 [a] mile from GZ across the wind”. At the completion of the
trial, the officers were decontaminated and the doses of radiation they had received were checked by monitoring staff.
Apparently it proved impossible “to contaminate the clothing sufficiently for the purpose of the trial”.
The Marcoo Test, 4 October 1956
The remaining New Zealand officers (Burns, Hamilton and Peart) were amongst the 98 Indoctrinee Force officers selected
to participate in the second test of the Buffalo series. The role of this group is set out in the following extract from
the Atomic Weapons Establishment report on the Indoctrinee Force:
a. Work out for themselves the likely effects of a surface burst of an assumed 4 kton yield, using known
scaling laws.
b. Carry out a TEWT (Tactical Exercise Without Troops) in the area around Marcoo, the aim being to assess
the results of such a weapon bursting in a battalion position . . .
c. Discuss, by syndicates, six tactical problems relating to the use of the 4 kton weapon . . .
d. Experience some of the actual effects of the Round 2 explosion in three different environments:
(i) Twenty-four officers, in four groups of 6, to be installed in field shelters with overhead
cover, at a distance not nearer than one mile.
(ii) Four officers to be installed in a “closed-down” armoured fighting vehicle placed on the surface
at the same distance, and head-on to ground zero.
(iii) The remainder, 70 officers, to stand in the open under conditions similar to those experienced
at North Base on Round 1.
The second test, which was code-named Marcoo, took place at 1700 hours on 4 October. It involved the detonation of a
1.5-kiloton atomic bomb at ground level to get information “about cratering and ground-shock effects”. According to the
Royal Commission the indoctrinees witnessed the explosion from a viewing stand about 3200 yards [2926 metres] from
ground zero, from a Centurion tank and a series of covered shelters located 2000 yards [1829 metres] from ground zero.
In his report, however, Peart states that the Centurion tank and covered shelters were about 1600 yards [1463 metres]
from ground zero and that the rest of the indoctrinees observed the test from the open about 2300 yards [2103 metres]
from ground zero. Major Hamilton was in one of the covered shelters, while the other New Zealanders observed the test
from the open. The explosion was marked by a “brilliant flash”, but no fireball was visible because of “the dust cloud
surrounding the explosion. Little heat was felt. A distorted mushroom cloud formed… The shockwave, as felt by the
indoctrinees, was much more pronounced than in Round one and was uncomfortably intense”. Peart noted in his report that
the indoctrinees “in the underground shelters estimated that an earth movement of approximately 1½ inches longitudinally
and in the vertical plane at 1600 yards from ground zero”. It appears that Major Hamilton may have been near the
entrance to his shelter when the detonation took place. After the explosion the indoctrinees were able to observe the
area around the explosion from a tower located about 1600 yards [1463 metres] from ground zero.
Radiation Dosages
In December 1956, the New Zealand defence liaison staff in Melbourne passed on data that they had received about the
radiation dosages received by the five New Zealand members of the Indoctrinee Force after the first Hurricane test. They
noted that the “dosage was recorded by film badges. The response of the film first used was such that an accurate
reading below .4r [roentgen] was not practicable. In consequence first readings are shown as ‘less than .4r’. Readings
for subsequent exposures are shown with greater accuracy.” The principal potential hazard to personnel involved in
nuclear weapon tests comes “from the external irradiation of the body by gamma rays”. The main way of recording exposure
to gamma radiation at the Maralinga test site was for personnel to wear film badges “at all relevant times and places”.
The film badges used were “based on the normal package for dental x-rays but with different photographic emulsions”. The
film sat in a brass holder and was also able to measure exposure to beta radiation. The radiation dosage information
given to the New Zealand authorities is set out below:
Dosages : New Zealand Personnel Attending Buffalo Test,
Maralinga 1956
No. Name Unit Date
- Cdr L.B. Carey RNZN/LO Melbourne less than .4r
30041 Lt Col W.R.K. Morrison AHQ Wellington
New Zealand
less than .4r
30055 Lt Col J. Burns AHQ Wellington
New Zealand
less than .4r
+.04r on D1+3*
30535 Maj P.H.G. Hamilton HQ Cmd Buckle St
Wellington
New Zealand
Less than .4r
73501 Flt Lt R.H. Peart RNZAF Station, Wigram, New Zealand
Less than .4r
+.07r on D1+3*
* D1+3 means 30 September clothing trial – D-day means day of detonation (for more than one detonation in the same
series they were designated D1-day, D2-day, etc.) See Royal Commission, vol. 2, Appendix A, I-2.
This data is identical to the information contained in the Atomic Weapons Establishment report AWE T1/95, ‘Operation
Buffalo: Personal Details for Indoctrinee Force and Support Staff’’. The men involved in the contaminated clothing trial
received very low doses of radiation with Burns receiving .04r and Peart .07r on top of the doses they had received
during their earlier tour around the site of the explosion.
The New Zealand authorities were not, it seems, sent any information about the radiation doses received by our officers
at the second Buffalo test. The Atomic Weapons Establishment report AWE T1/95, however, contains the following
information about dosages received by the New Zealand members of the Indoctrinee Force during their service at
Maralinga:
RADIOLOGICAL DETAILS FOR THE NEW ZEALAND INDOCTRINEES
IF No., Rank & Name Round 1 Activities Round 2 Activities Total Dose Reported (r) Remarks on Individual Doses
Film Badge No. Recorded Dose (r) Film Badge No. Recorded Dose (r)
D1+1/ D1+2 D1+3
? Lt Col Burns 90126< .4 .04 90912 .03< .47 -
123 Cdr Carey, LB 90123< .4< .4 -
127 Maj Hamilton 90127< .4 90913 .03< .43 -
122 Lt Col Morrison 90122< .4< .4 -
134 Flt Lt Peart 90134< .4 .07 90914 .03< .5 -
All three New Zealanders were recorded as having received a radiation dose of .03r. In a report on the test, the head of
the Maralinga health physics organisation at the second test (Round 2) noted that “the dose for Round 2 [Marcoo] was
negligible, but to be safe .03 (point zero three) roentgens should be added where appropriate”. The table below is also
taken from the AWE report T1/95 and shows that only a few members of the Indoctrinee Force received close to the 3
roentgens which had been set as the maximum safe dose for the operation:
INDOCTRINEE FORCE: TOTAL DOSE STATISTICS
Doses (r) UKIF AIF NZIF TOTALS
0 to < 0.1 4 16 - 20
0.1 to < 0.2 1 - - 1
0.2 to < 0.3 - - - -
0.3 to < 0.4 70 35 2 107
0.4 to < 0.5 48 10 3 61
0.5 to < 0.6 26 16 - 42
0.6 to < 0.7 15 8 - 23
0.7 to < 0.8 3 1 - 4
0.8 to < 0.9 1 - - 1
Doses (r) UKIF AIF NZIF TOTALS
Higher Doses
1.0 to < 1.1 1 - - 1
1.1 to < 1.2 2 - - 2
1.3 to < 1.4 1 - - 1
1.4 to < 1.5 1 - - 1
2.1 to < 2.2 1 - - 1
2.2 to < 2.3 1 - - 1
2.3 to < 2.4 1 - - 1
2.6 to < 2.7 1 - - 1
GRAND TOTALS 177 86 5 268
The Scientific Director of the National Radiation Laboratory, Dr Andrew McEwan, has noted that “the T1/95 report
indicates that the accumulated doses received by the five New Zealanders were all ‘< 0.5r’. The ‘r’ stands for ‘roentgen’ and is approximately equivalent to 10 millisieverts (mSv) in modern units hence
‘0.5r’ implies 5mSv”. An accumulated dose of this size is “within the range of common annual exposure from natural
background radiation in different countries around the world”.
An Unofficial Observer at the Breakaway Test, 21 October 1956
In October 1956 arrangements were made with the Royal Air Force by the New Zealand Joint Services Liaison Staff in
Melbourne for an RNZAF representative to observe the fourth and final test in the Buffalo series, which was codenamed
Breakaway. The officer selected for this task, Wing Commander Ivan Reid Mitchell, DFC, was an unofficial observer at the
test, and this is probably the reason why his attendance at the test has not been generally known. The test took place
just after midnight very early on 22 October. The weapon being tested was detonated at the top of a 100 [30 metre] foot
tower and had an estimated yield of less than 16 kilotons. Mitchell and the other observers were at an observation point
on a slight rise about six miles (9.65 km) from the test weapon. They stood with their backs to the blast with their
eyes closed. Three seconds after the explosion they were allowed to turn around. Mitchell reported that:
On facing of the firing area, the glowing fireball could be observed extending up to and apparently through the
cloud base. Sufficient light was still either being directly emitted from the fireball or refracted from the cloud to
illuminate the country side [sic]. Trees and buildings stood out in sharp relief. The fireball appeared to surge and
heave and after an indeterminate time, which may have lasted 10/20 seconds, it died away. The incipient stem of the
mushroom cloud could be clearly seen but the low cloud precluded observation of the mushroom phenomenon.
About 30 minutes after the explosion, Mitchell was allowed to enter the forward area around the ground zero in the
company of a British scientist, E.R. Drake Seager. Before entering this area, they stopped at a health control post and
were issued with a dosemeter. They traveled round the forward area in a Land Rover for almost an hour in a zone 1500
yards [1372 metres] to 700 yards [640 metres] from ground zero. When they left the forward area, the total dose of
radiation recorded on the dosemeter was 1.1 roentgen.
New Zealand Observers at Maralinga, 1957
In August 1957 New Zealand was invited by the British Government, with the agreement of the Australian Government, to
send two observers to one of the explosions in the atomic weapon test series codenamed Antler. The tests were scheduled
to begin the following month at Maralinga. The Chiefs of Staff decided to send only one officer from New Zealand,
Captain Graeme Stewart McNaughton, a member of the New Zealand Defence Scientific Corps. McNaughton had a doctorate in
radiation chemistry from Leeds University and was attached to the Nuclear Sciences Division of the Department of
Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR). As part of his work with the DSIR, McNaughton had been involved in
establishing a network of radioactive fallout stations in New Zealand and the Pacific islands. The DSIR believed that
McNaughton would be able to pick up much useful information through discussions with officials at Maralinga. This
information they considered would be “of extreme value in our own evaluation of the radiation hazards to our Island
Dependencies from the Pacific A Bomb Testing Programme”. The other New Zealand observer was a member of the New Zealand
liaison staff in Melbourne, Lieutenant Colonel Dennis Alfred Caughley. The approval of the Minister of Defence was, it
seems, obtained shortly after the decision to send the observers was made.
The two New Zealand officers were part of a very large group of observers, which included military personnel and
scientists from a wide range of countries with which Britain had defence ties including Norway, France, Italy, Iraq,
Turkey and Pakistan. The observer group were flown from Adelaide to Maralinga to witness the second test (codenamed
Biak) in the series, which was at 1000 hours on 25 September 1957. They witnessed the detonation of an approximately six
kiloton device, which had been placed at the top of a 100 foot [30 metre] tower. The observer group were stationed about
nine miles [14.5 kilometres] from ground zero. They stood with their backs to the blast and had their eyes closed.
McNaughton reported that “the light flash was distinctly visible through closed eyelids. At the same time the heat wave
was felt like a hot wind on the back of the neck for about a second…. The noise of the explosion arrived after 37
seconds but the blast was not felt”. About three or four seconds after the explosion, the observers were allowed to turn
around and face the blast. “The rapidly cooling fireball could be distinguished though largely shrouded by the cloud of
radioactive bomb debris which was beginning to condense. The subsequent cloud development was typical of a low air
burst.” After the test, McNaughton briefly visited the “forward test area” which was closer to ground zero and the sites
of earlier tests.
The information gathered by the New Zealand personnel who took part in the British nuclear weapon tests in Australia was
passed on to their colleagues in the New Zealand Armed Forces through reports, presentations and participation in
seminars.
Other New Zealanders at Maralinga
A number of other New Zealand military personnel visited Maralinga at some time between 1955 and 1966 as they are listed
as receiving one of the identity cards required for all personnel visiting or employed at the Maralinga test site. The
identity cards material is in the form of a card index now held by the National Archives of Australia in Canberra. Some
people who were security cleared, but who did not actually visit the test site are included in the card index. A total
of 17 New Zealand military personnel are listed in this card series. They include the five New Zealand members of the
Indoctrinee Force and Captain McNaughton, but the cards do not list Lieutenant Colonel Caughley or Wing Commander
Mitchell. This might be because Caughley and Mitchell were members of the New Zealand liaison staff in Melbourne and may
therefore have had the correct kind of identity card before visiting Maralinga. Of the remaining cards eight are for men
who passed through Maralinga on 2 September 1957, 12 days before the first test in the Antler series on 14 September.
The names of the men in this group are set out below:
Leading Aircraftsman (LAC) Francis Wilfred De Malmanche, No. 76041, RNZAF
Sergeant William James Raymond Gray, No. 75945, RNZAF
Flying Officer (pilot) John L’Eef, No. 709786, RNZAF
LAC Noel Francis Lynch, RNZAF, No. 922390, RNZAF
LAC Bruce Dalton Macken, No. 77226, RNZAF
LAC John Robert Redman, No. 77568, RNZAF
Flying Officer (Navigator) Frederick Edgar Arthur Rowe, No. 77533, RNZAF
LAC Stuart Adrian Walters, No. 897584, RNZAF.
In September 1957 all this group were serving with No. 41 Squadron RNZAF, a transport unit operating Bristol Freighters,
which was based in Singapore. No. 41 Squadron operated over a very wide area. On 2 September a Bristol Freighter, NZ
5909, captained by Flying Officer L’Eef had a stopover at Maralinga. During the day it flew supplies from Maralinga to
Mount Clarence and return. The flight time was 3 hours 37 minutes. Mount Clarence was a monitoring station for the
Maralinga testing area. The personnel on board consisted of a flight crew of three (L’Eef, Rowe and Gray) and a
five-strong maintenance team (De Malmanche, Lynch, Macken, Redman and Walters).
Three other New Zealand officers are listed in the card series. They are:
Squadron Leader Peter Brotherhood Andrews, RNZAF
Squadron Leader R (Roger Patrick) Drayton, RNZAF
Group Captain William Hector Stratton, RNZAF
Squadron Leader Andrews, an RNZAF education officer, was at a Royal Australian Air Force Staff College course between
January and December 1958. On the card dealing with Andrews there is a reference to an RAAF memorandum dated 17 August
1958 and it therefore appears most probable that Andrews’s visit to Maralinga was part of his staff college course.
There were no nuclear weapon tests at Maralinga after 1957, but between April and November 1958 a series of ‘minor
trials’ were conducted at Maralinga. The minor trials consisted of experiments connected with the British nuclear
weapons programme, which did not involve nuclear detonations, but did on occasion result in the release of radiation.
The minor trials programme at Maralinga continued until 1963. Andrews, who was born on 30 March 1926, retired from the
RNZAF in March 1966 and as far as we are aware is still alive.
Squadron Leader Roger Patrick Drayton was in March 1965 sent on an exchange posting with the RAAF for two years. He held
the position of S14 with Support Command RAAF. It was the intention that he would “gain experience in the assessment and
provisioning of radio equipment” during this appointment. On the Maralinga identity card for Drayton there is a
reference to an RAAF list dated 16 March 1966. It would seem probable from this that he may have visited Maralinga in
1966 as part of his duties with the RAAF. Drayton, who was born on 4 January 1925, retired from the RNZAF in 1969 and
died at Paraparumu on 21 June 1986.
Group Captain (later Air-Vice Marshal) William Hector Stratton, DFC and Bar, mid, took up the position of Head of New
Zealand Joint Services Liaison Staff in Melbourne on 1 September 1956 and held that position until February 1960. On
Stratton’s Maralinga identity card there is reference to an RAAF paper dated 25 June 1958. This strongly suggests that
Stratton may have visited Maralinga in the course of his duties as Head of the New Zealand Defence Joint Services
Liaison Staff. After completing his service as Chief of Air Staff in 1971, Air-Vice Marshal Stratton, who was born on 22
July 1916, retired to Australia and as far as we are aware is still alive.
Included in the Report of the Royal Commission into British Nuclear Tests in Australia, witness and statement list is
the name C.P. Weaver, Royal New Zealand Navy. This person would appear to be Able Seaman Colin Peter Weaver, NZ15133 who
was serving in the RNZN at the time of both the British nuclear weapon tests in Australia and in the central Pacific. He
was posted to HMNZS Rotoiti from 12 August 1957 to 2 August 1959 and so was presumably on board when the Rotoiti
participated in the nuclear weapon test Grapple X at Christmas Island on 8 November 1957. At the time of the earlier
tests in Australia he was serving on the frigate HMNZS Pukaki or HMNZS Philomel in Auckland. It appears likely,
therefore, that his evidence to the Australian Royal Commission related to the Grapple tests rather than indicating that
he was involved in the earlier tests in Australia.
New Zealand Observers at Operation Grapple, May 1957
In addition to the observers sent to the atomic tests in Australia, New Zealand sent observers to other tests in the
United States and the Pacific. Early in 1957 the British Government invited New Zealand to send one observer to the
first test by United Kingdom of a thermonuclear device. The New Zealand Chiefs of Staff considered that, given
substantial assistance the New Zealand Armed Forces were giving the British thermonuclear weapon testing programme, that
should be allowed to send three observers to the test. The Minister of Defence endorsed this position and when
approached the British agreed to three observers attending the test. The three observers selected to attend the test
were Commander Logan Boyce Carey, RNZN, Major David John Aitken and Mr H.J. Yeabsley, the Deputy Director of the Health
Department’s Dominion X-Ray and Radium Laboratory (now the National Radiation Laboratory).
Along with observers from other countries, the three New Zealanders observed the first British thermonuclear test on 15
May 1957 from HMS Alert. The Royal Navy ship was positioned about 30 miles [48 kilometres] from Malden Island, in the
central Pacific, when the bomb, which was dropped from a British aircraft, exploded high above the Island. Available
information about the size of the detonation is limited, but it appears that it was less than one megaton, perhaps about
half a megaton. The observers had been issued with “white anti-flash suits, hoods, and gloves and with dark goggles.”
They sat on the deck of the ship facing away from the blast. Ten seconds after the explosion they were allowed to turn
around. Yeabsley noted that “at that time the fire-ball was less bright than the sun and could be viewed with the
unshielded eye. I estimated its diameter to be about 1½ miles [2.4 kilometres] and the distance from its lowest point to
the sea to be at least three miles (15,000 feet) [4572 metres]”. After the test Yeabsley held discussions with members
of the British scientific team who told him that the radioactive cloud produced by the detonation had travelled up into
the stratosphere and that they expected little, if any, pollution on nearly islands. The New Zealand scientist was
impressed by the way the tests were being conducted, and concluded in his report that the tests “were being made in such
a fashion that the possibility of highly active local fall-out was reduced to a minimum and that no person under the
care of the New Zealand Government was liable to suffer radiation damage from the operation”. Yeabsley’s views about the
safety of the test was supported by British scientific reports sent to the New Zealand Government.
The Smoky Test, Nevada, 1 September 1957
In May 1957 the United States Army invited Air Commodore T.F. (Frank) Gill, the New Zealand defence attaché in
Washington and another New Zealand officer to attend a nuclear weapon test to be held at the Nevada test site. The
Chiefs of Staff Committee decided that the cost of sending an officer from New Zealand to attend this test was too great
and that Air Commodore Gill and perhaps his deputy should attend.
In the event only Gill’s deputy, Lieutenant Colonel John Alexander Pountney, attended the 15th test in the American test
series codenamed Operation Plumb Bob. The test he observed on 1 September 1957 was codenamed ‘Smoky’. Pountney was one
of 80 observers from a range of NATO countries and other nations with defence links with the United States. They
observed the detonation of an approximately 44 kiloton nuclear bomb mounted on a 700 foot steel tower at 0530 hours (a
few minutes before dawn) from a hill about 16 miles [26 kilometres] away from the tower (ground zero). The observers
“were issued with dark glasses, through which an electric light globe at 20 yards was just visible”. Pountney reported
that the “detonation followed the familiar pattern of fireball-smoke-mushroom, and the countryside for a radius of many
miles was as bright as in clear daylight. Simultaneously with the detonation, a scrub-covered hillside some 2 miles [3.2
kilometres] from the tower burst into flame. As the mushroom cloud formed, it was surrounded by an aura of vivid blue
lasting about one minute, and this was seen clearly from a distance of over 400 miles.”
The test was an “Army participation shot” and about 700 American and Canadian troops were dug into positions about 8500
yards [7772 metres] from ground zero. “Immediately after the blast, and as soon as the fallout path had been determined
and the radiation monitors had given clearance, the force was lifted by helicopters and taken to pre-designated assault
positions, for an attack against deep objectives”.
The Pisonia Test, Eniwetok Atoll, 18 July 1958
In June 1958 the United States Army Attaché in Wellington, on behalf of the American Secretary of Defence, invited the
Minister of Defence, Phillip Connolly, to send a member of the New Zealand Armed Forces to witness a nuclear test at the
Eniwetok proving ground, in the Marshall Islands the following month. The invitation was accepted by Connolly, after
consultation, it appears, with the Prime Minister Walter Nash and the Chiefs of Staff who noted that:
The study of warfare under nuclear conditions is undertaken by all three Services. The study, however, is of
necessity theoretical, as the opportunity for New Zealand officers to witness nuclear explosions and to study their
effects at first-hand occurs very infrequently. Such an opportunity would therefore be of considerable benefit not only
to the individual concerned, but also to all three Services to whom he could pass on his first-hand experience.
The officer selected to observe the American test was Wing Commander Ivan Reid Mitchell who had been present at one of
the British tests at Maralinga in 1956. Mitchell and a group of the observers from Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, Spain,
Philippines and Iran arrived at Eniwetok at 0800 hours on 18 July 1958. Three hours later they witnessed the detonation
of an estimated 250 kiloton nuclear weapon. The weapon had been placed on a barge in the atoll’s lagoon about eight and
a half miles [13.5 kilometres] from the observers’ position on Jap Tan Island. The observers, who were accompanied by a
United States Air Force General, were issued with very dark goggles, which “enabled the wearer to observe every detail
of the test.” In his report on his visit Mitchell included a very detailed account of the test:
At zero hour the device was detonated. The fireball was immediately apparent and it rapidly grew until it
reached a semi-diameter of about 900ft [274 metres]. Even with the high density goggles the brilliance of the light
emitted from the fireball was apparent. A “Wilson” cloud effect was seen to form and envelop the fireball as it rose.
This cloud did not, however, appear to persist for more than 10/15 seconds. Without the aid of a movie camera and
synchronised timing devices it is impossible to give an accurate chronological statement of the sequences of the
phenomena observed. The following is, however, an approximate statement of the sequences:
M - Fireball visible on horizon, growing rapidly – intense bright light.
M + 1 sec. - Fireball reached maximum semi-diameter of about 900 ft and commenced to rise.
- Intense blast of heat felt on exposed parts of the body. Stated by Dr Ogle to be about 1 cal./sq.cm. The heat or
thermal effect was much more pronounced than that experienced at Maralinga for the low airburst shot of a 20 kt bomb.
M + 2 sec. - Heavy earth tremors experienced which appeared to follow a sine wave pattern, giving the
impression of seven distinct shocks which lasted for 8-10 seconds. Light emission still intense. “Wilson” cloud effect
visible around fireball.
M + 3 sec. - (High Density goggles raised). Fireball rising rapidly and glowing intensely. Hugh
column of water noted at ground zero extending upwards. Shock front, distinguished as a dark circle, moving outwards at
a great speed.
M + 5 sec. - Fireball continues to rise, light still bright but more diffused. Column of water and
stem of “mushroom” difficult to separate. Dark ring on surface extending outwards from ground zero. Thought to be wave.
M + 15 sec. - Fireball dead. Cloud rising rapidly, boiling and swelling. Stem of mushroom now well
defined.
M + 30 sec. - Experienced blast from shock wave. Very heavy, sufficient to knock a man down if
standing upright. Coconut palms bent before impact. Negative pressure wave not detected, but probably due to
psychological effect arising from unexpected severity of shock front. Slightly later the sound accompanying the
explosion was heard. The intensity of the sound was high but of comparatively short duration.
M + 8 mins. - Negative water wave surge reached short of Jap Tan Island. For some minutes it had been
possible to watch the water surge on adjacent atolls closer to GZ. The negative surge was followed by a positive surge
and this sequence was prolonged for 15/30 minutes. At its greatest intensity it is estimated the water rose and fell 10
feet.
M + 10 mins. - Heavy rain fell from clouds in the area. A well defined water spout developed in the GZ
zone and persisted for about 30 minutes. The atomic cloud which had been obscured by cloud build-up was now clearly seen
through cloud breaks. Initially it appeared to be moving westwards and at one stage seemed to be almost overhead.
Subsequently it drifted to the East. The purplish hue of the cloud caused by iodine impregnation was a notable
characteristic.
M + 20 mins. - Group embarked for return journey to Parry Island.
Mitchell noted that the test was in effect an underwater explosion and that this type of test produced a significant
amount of radioactive fallout. He also noted that the very limited amount of information provided by the American
authorities meant that the participation of a New Zealand observer was of very little value to the New Zealand Armed
Forces. This point was taken up by the Chiefs of Staff Committee who agreed that in the event of New Zealand receiving a
similar invitation in the future that they would propose to ask the United States authorities for “more detailed
background information.”
Mitchell was it seems the last of the group official New Zealand military observers to attend atmospheric nuclear weapon
tests. The only information held by the New Zealand Defence Force on the radiation doses received by this group of
personnel relates to the members of the Indoctrinee Force and Wing Commander Mitchell’s presence at the Breakaway test
in 1956.
JOHN CRAWFORD
Deputy Director History
Headquarters New Zealand Defence Force