A survey of physical damage of bomb blasts in Nagasaki, Japan after World War II. Twisted and distorted frame supports of a gas holder. Damaged reinforced concrete buildings in the background. Distorted frame supports of the gas holder. The ruptured dome of the gas holder. Distorted frame structures on the ground.
A survey of physical damage of bomb blasts in Nagasaki, Japan after World War II. A crumpled wall of the Nagasaki Prison. Remaining portion of the wall still standing. Collapsed cell block walls of the prison. Two round poured concrete wall casings which withstood the blast. The cell block in the foreground is completely demolished. A smoke stack of a boiler house and a concrete water tank.
A survey of physical damage of bomb blasts in Nagasaki, Japan after World War II. A smoke stack of a boiler house which withstood the blast. Wrecked frame structure of a factory in the foreground. An open hearth furnace portion of the Mitsubishi Small Arms Plant as seen from a moving flat car traveling on the Nagasaki main line.
United States Army Air Force Boeing B-29 Superfortress aircraft of the 73rd Bomb Wing, 500th Bomb Group (Tail Code "Z") seen on Saipan. A B-29 aircraft taxis and turns on a runway. A rainbow in the sky. A B-29 being moved with a tug. Ground handling of a B-29 aircraft. An airman direct a pilot to the parking spot. A group of airmen stands near the parked aircraft. On its fuselage below the cockpit, it displays a black bird's wing on top of a black globe and a long yellow paint stripe underneath. The airmen take equipment out of the aircraft and haul it away in a cart. Three B-29 aircraft parked.
Activities of airmen at U.S. 20th Bomber Command headquarters in Guam immediately after end of World War II. Improvised wind-driven washing machines. A tent area and palm trees. Men in a chow line. They sterilize their mess gear in water heated by a stove. A sign on a building reads 'Headquarters, 20th Bomber Command'. A man walks out of the building. B-29s of the 314th Bomb Wing, 29th Bomb Group (Tail Code "O") are parked on flight line.
People work in the Moore School of Electrical Engineering in Pennsylvania, United States. Women technicians adjust an early computer known as the Electronic Numerical Integrator And Computer, also known as ENIAC. They talk while working. A woman technician at the controls and another woman instructs reading from a note book. Women load computer punch cards into card reading machines.
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