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A damaged area cordoned off after an explosion at the Givaudan Color Sense plant in Louisville, Kentucky, on November 13. ... of another deadly explosion at the same location 21 years ago, when it ...
Two people are fighting for life after an explosion at a chemical manufacturing plant in Louisville, Kentucky left 12 people in hospital.. The blast rocked Louisville’s Clifton Neighborhood on ...
Firefighters gather near an emergency services vehicle after an explosion in the Clifton Neighborhood in Louisville, Kentucky, on Tuesday. Two factory workers were killed, plant owner Givaudan ...
Hardinsburg, Kentucky, US Nuclear weapon partially damaged After both planes took off from Columbus Air Force Base in Mississippi, a USAF B-52F-100-BO (No. 57-036), with two sealed-pit nuclear weapons collided at 32,000 feet (9,754 m) with a KC-135 refueling aircraft (No. 57-1513), during a refueling procedure near Hardinsburg, Kentucky. Both ...
An area near the Trinity site is designated the Permanent High Explosive Test Site (PHETS) and was used in the 1980s to host very large ANFO blasts for international testing of military gear. The Trinity nuclear site was originally private property taken over by the Army to test the plutonium implosion weapon, the first nuclear explosion on Earth.
An explosion of oil tankers at the Islam-Qala customs post that damaged or destroyed more than 500 oil tankers. [138] [139] [140] 13 February 2021 Afghanistan: Balkh Province: 30 Unknown An explosion occurred at a Taliban bomb-making class. Thirty militants (including six foreigners) were killed, and an unknown number were injured. [141] 23 ...
Roughly 210 households in Whitewater Township, about 22 miles west-northwest of Cincinnati in an area near the city airport and the Kentucky state line, were under evacuation orders, officials ...
Despite being the first state to enter into agreement with the Atomic Energy Commission, Kentucky has never been the site of a nuclear reactor. However, in 1962, Nuclear Engineering Company, Inc. (NECO) bought 252 acres (1.02 km 2) of land on Maxey Flats and submitted an application for a license to bury radioactive waste there. [6]