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Encyclopedia > Eniwetok

Enewetak (or Eniwetok) is an atoll in the Marshall Islands of the central Pacific Ocean. Its land consists of about 40 small islets totalling less than 6 km², surrounding a lagoon, 80 km (50 mi) in circumference. It is located at 11° 30' North, 162° 20' East, making the second westernmost atoll of the Ralik Chain. 1999 population was 820.


Technically a Spanish colony, Enewetak was not known to Europeans until visited in 1794 by the British merchant sloop Walpole, who called it "Brown's Range" (thus the Japanese name "Brown Atoll"). It was visited by only a dozen or so ships before the establishment of the German colony of the Marshall Islands in 1885. Along with the rest of the Marshalls, Enewetak was captured by Japan in 1914 and mandated to them by the League of Nations in 1920.


The Japanese mostly ignored the atoll until World War II. In November 1942, they built an airfield on Engebi Island, which was used for staging planes to the Carolines and the rest of the Marshalls. When the Gilberts fell to the US, the Japanese Army's 1st Amphibious Brigade came in to defend the atoll, January 4, 1944. They were unable to finish fortifying the place before the February invasion by the US, which captured all the islets in a week.


After the war, the residents were evacuated, often involuntarily, and the atoll was used for atomic bomb testing. This went on from 1948 to 1962, when atmospheric testing ended. The first hydrogen bomb test, in 1952 was at Enewetak.


For examanition of the explosion clouds of the nuclear bombs in 1957/58 several rockets (mostly from rockoons) were launched.


The people began returning in the 1970s, and on May 15, 1977 the US government began removing contaminated soil and other material from the atoll, declaring it safe for habitation in 1980.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Battle of Eniwetok - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (425 words)
The Battle of Eniwetok was a battle of the Pacific campaign of World War II, fought between 17 February 1944 and 23 February 1944 on Eniwetok Atoll in the Marshall Islands.
Naval bombardment of Eniwetok began on 17 February and the 22nd Marine Regiment, commanded by Colonel John T. Walker, landed on Engebi Island, on the north side of the atoll, on 18 February at 08:44.
Captured documents suggested that the defences on Eniwetok Island would be light, and accordingly there was only a short bombardment on 19 February before the 106th Infantry Regiment went ashore.
Eniwetok - Wikipedia (330 words)
Eniwetok (jap.: エニウェトック環ç¤) ist eine Insel im Pazifischen Ozean, die zu den Marshallinseln gehört.
Auf Eniwetok verloren 34 amerikanische Soldaten ihr Leben, 94 wurden verwundet und drei sind bis heute vermisst.
Während der Atombombentests waren rund 11.000 US-Techniker, Wissenschafter und Militärs auf Eniwetok stationiert.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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