• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

America’s Cheyenne Mountain Complex Can Withstand A 30-Megaton Nuclear Bomb

March 16, 2024 by Deborah Bloomfield

Beneath the rocky surface of Cheyenne Mountain in Colorado, US, lurks a settlement primed for Armageddon. The Cheyenne Mountain Complex was built at the height of the Cold War, and, when it pulls out all the stops, can withstand nuclear, electromagnetic, and biological attacks.

What is the Cheyenne Mountain Complex?

The bunker-on-steroids is one of America’s most secure military installations, shielded beneath 760 meters (2,500 feet) of granite. Having been blasted into the mountain, the entrance arch is dwarfed by Cheyenne, feeding a tunnel whose curved design would redirect any offending materials right out the other end. 

Advertisement

What kind of impact can the Cheyenne Mountain Complex survive?

Since the 23-ton blast doors won’t be on the receiving end of any blast impact, the setup is estimated to keep the Cheyenne Mountain Complex secure even in the face of a 30-megaton nuclear bomb. That means it would fare well against a nuclear bomb like the B41, also known as the Mk-41, which was made by the US during the Cold War era. 

But against the 50-megaton Tsar Bomb, the most powerful nuclear weapon ever created and tested? Well, it doesn’t bear thinking about.

cheyenne mountain complex blast door

The blast doors were closed on 9/11.

When does the Cheyenne Mountain Complex close?

The doors on the ultra-secure military facility were slammed shut on 9/11, and will do so again in the event of a serious threat, such as an identified missile launch, or “button-up scenario” drill. Worthy threats for such a lockdown may be electromagnetic – from weapons or the Sun – chemical, biological, or nuclear, and any lingering material from these attacks is kept out thanks to a pressurized air system that protects the 300-or-so people walled up inside the Cheyenne Mountain Complex.

How did they build the Cheyenne Mountain Complex?

A staggering 693,000 tons of granite had to be shifted to make way for the Cheyenne Mountain Complex whose 15 spring-mounted buildings span 5.1 acres (2.1 hectares) at a height of 2,915 meters (9,565 feet). Since it first became operational on April 20, 1966, it’s remained active, occupied, and prepared for emergencies of the apocalypse kind.

Advertisement

The stronghold houses a variety of military and civilian operations, including air and space surveillance, ballistic missile defense, emergency operations, and intelligence analysis. As such, if the shit hits the proverbial fan, it must remain functional to coordinate and communicate military intervention.

Curious about what nuclear war would mean today? Mark May 31, 2024, in your diaries, as we’ll be talking to journalist and Pulitzer-Prize finalist Annie Jacobsen about what happens when a nuclear bomb goes off for CURIOUS Live, IFLScience’s virtual event in collaboration with our e-magazine, CURIOUS. Subscribe to our newsletter to receive the monthly issues, and for further information on this year’s line-up of speakers.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Spotify’s Clubhouse clone adds six new weekly shows, some that tie to Spotify playlists
  2. WeChat blocks China Evergrande messaging groups, some users say
  3. Humans Will Next Land On The Moon In One Of These Locations
  4. JWST Confirms Its First Exoplanet – And It’s Earth-Sized!

Source Link: America's Cheyenne Mountain Complex Can Withstand A 30-Megaton Nuclear Bomb

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • 2024 Saw Higher Levels Of Carbon Dioxide In The Atmosphere Than Ever Before
  • Halloween Fireballs Will Grace Our Skies As The Taurid Meteor Showers Arrive
  • Newly Discovered Hunting Megastructures Suggest Pre-Bronze Age Societies More Sophisticated Than Previously Thought
  • What Is Spectroscopy And Why Is It So Important To Science?
  • Parkinson’s “Trigger” Seen For The First Time: Scientists Image The Toxic Molecules Inside The Human Brain
  • What Flying Animals Exist That Are Not Birds?
  • DNA Evidence Uncovers Surprising Origins Of Native Americans
  • Single Gene Swap “Transfers A Behavior” Between Two Species For The First Time
  • Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Has A Rare “Anti-Tail”, New Observations Confirm
  • Asteroid Apophis: Animation Shows Asteroid’s Nail-Biting Close Approach To Earth In 2029
  • Titan Breaks A Key Chemistry Rule: What That Means For Alien Life
  • Scientists Studied “Chicago Rat Hole” – They Have Bad News, The South Atlantic’s Magnetic Field Weak Spot Is Growing, And Much More This Week
  • Could This Be The Real Reason Humans Survived And Neanderthals Died Out?
  • Newly Discovered Snail Species Named After Studio Ghibli Co-Founder Is A Hairy Beauty
  • 2025 SC79 Is The Second-Fastest Asteroid Ever Found – And Only The Second Within Venus’ Orbit
  • When Red Devil Spiders Arrived On A New Island, Their Genome Dramatically Shrank In Half
  • Is This The World’s Oldest Story? Ancient Human Tale About The Seven Sisters May Be From 100,000 BCE
  • This Pill Is Actually A Tiny Printer That Repairs Internal Injuries Using Biocompatible Ink
  • “This Is Amazing”: Scientists Have Found Evidence Of A Long-Lost World Deep Within The Earth
  • From The Shiniest World To Lava And Eternal Darkness, These Are The Weirdest Known Planets
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version