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Secret Mesa: Inside Los Alamos National Laboratory [Hardcover]

Jo Ann Shroyer (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

October 24, 1997 0471040630 978-0471040637 1
"It's easy to feel watched in Los Alamos. During my first visit to the town several years ago, I stopped by the side of the road to take a picture of what I thought was just the Santa Fe National Forest. A small pickup truck did a quick U-turn and parked next to me until I left. When this happened again on another public highway in the area, I began to wonder whose woods these really were.

"Later I learned that the technical areas of Los Alamos National Laboratory extend far beyond the obvious cluster of gray and tan buildings at its center. They are spread out over forty-three square miles of woods and canyons and are hemmed in by national forest and parklands. It turns out I was nowhere near the heavily guarded areas of the lab, where picture taking would be considered a threat to national security. But I was quietly watched, nonetheless." —from the text

"It's easy to feel watched in Los Alamos," begins award-winning journalist Jo Ann Shroyer in this engrossing profile of life and work inside the world's most notorious science research center. Los Alamos is a world unto itself, rife with contradictions, haunted by its history, and yet bustling with an astonishing range of forefront science projects, from cancer research to the building of robotic ants. This is a town with the highest concentration of Ph.D.'s anywhere in the world; where children sometimes aren't allowed to know what their parents do for a living; and where weapons designers offer philosophical insights into why only deadly weapons can ensure lasting peace.

Created as a top-secret outpost on a desolate mesa in the New Mexico desert—exclusively for the purpose of assembling the world's first atomic weapon—Los Alamos was transformed during the Cold War into a high-powered science complex and full-blown "company town," with a population of 20,000, covering forty-three square miles and including schools, stores, churches, and a private ski slope. But even today, the town is tightly guarded by a 400-strong special security force, and glinting barriers of razor wire encircle research facilities protected by motion detectors and patrolled by armed guards.

As Shroyer probes behind closed doors, she finds a complex, colorful, and thoughtful community grappling with the legacy of its nuclear-tainted past and confronting the challenge of defining its future in the post-Cold War era. Drawing on extensive interviews with scientists and residents, from weapons designers to peace activists, she takes us into their labs and homes and explores the surprising range of their insights and research.

We accompany her as she "goes behind the fence" to visit the X-2 thermonuclear weapons facility and talk with weapons designer James "Jas" Mercer-Smith, who describes the lab's mission as "trying to keep people from killing themselves in vast numbers." We meet robot scientist Mark Tilden and witness the lively antics of the menagerie of mechanical creatures he calls his "Robot Jurassic Park." And we visit the bizarre junkyard overflowing with "techno trash" run by peace activist Ed Grothus, where he sells research materials, discarded by lab facilities that he ironically dubs nuclear waste.

A rich and evocative portrait of an intriguing, closed world, Secret Mesa ultimately offers a unique perspective on the complex questions surrounding the appropriate role, if any, for nuclear weapons in our future as well as the role of government-sponsored "big science" in spearheading much of the basic research so important to scientific progress.


Editorial Reviews

From Kirkus Reviews

A thorough, sometimes unsettling look at the culture of nuclear science. Famed for its role in the development of the atomic bomb, Los Alamos is today a little-visited town not far from Santa Fe. In New Mexico, writes journalist and first-time author Shroyer, the town is an anomaly--a predominantly white society in the midst of a multicultural state that is mainly Hispanic and Native American. With millions upon millions of federal dollars supporting it, Los Alamos is also an island of wealth in a poor state, inhabited by well-educated, civic-minded civil servants whose business happens to be mass destruction. That business is changing, writes Shroyer; Los Alamos scientists now cooperate with Russian scientists to make sure that no other party develops nuclear weapons, a matter of stuffing the genie back into the bottle. The collapse of the Soviet Union has made the world not safer but more dangerous, she observes, inasmuch as destructive technology is now leaving the former republics for armories in Iraq, Pakistan, and other countries. Her look at the people in charge of seeing that these countries do not drop the big one is illuminating, and it puts a comprehensible face on a mind-boggling science that has inspired profound fear for generations. (One expert admitted to Shroyer that he was surprisingly frightened the first time he walked into the plutonium facility at Los Alamos.) Shroyer's reports are not always reassuring. For one thing, some residents of Los Alamos suffer from various cancers that can be attributed to radiation. For another, the technology is imperfect; as one scientist puts it, ``A cosmic ray can go through and flip a bit in the computer so that you get a completely screwball answer.'' All this doesn't seem to bother the residents of Los Alamos overmuch; after all, the local oldies' radio station, K-BOM, carries the slogan ``We're radio-active!'' A solid piece of reporting on a little-viewed corner of national life. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Review

Readers will be "pleased with Jo Ann Shroyer's book about the nuclear weapons laboratory at Los Alamos, which is spiced with striking anecdotes of...scientists' eccentricity and dark humor."—Science


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (October 24, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471040630
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471040637
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,217,126 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating reading, February 4, 2002
This review is from: Secret Mesa: Inside Los Alamos National Laboratory (Hardcover)
I highly recommend Shroyer's Secret Mesa. In a thought-provoking way, the author introduces the reader to the fascinating world of Los Alamos, research center AND town. Never dry, the book relates history and present day projects with a human interest focus. Frankly, I couldn't put the book down, and learned a myriad of new things by reading it. If you're looking for a unique read, pick up this one.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
It's easy to feel watched in Los Alamos. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
plutonium injection studies, human radiation studies, proliferant countries, surplus plutonium, weapons community, glass logs, openness policy, weapons designers, weapons science, weapons scientists, lab management, lab employees
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, Cold War, Manhattan Project, Soviet Union, New Mexico, Joe Martz, Steve Younger, Bob Kelley, Department of Energy, Sig Hecker, New York, Yucca Mountain, The Witch, Ashley Pond, Gulf War, Merri Wood, Robert Oppenheimer, Rocky Flats, Scott Duncan, Tiger Team, Tom Ribe, Department of Defense, Jim Smith, North Korea, Paul White
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