Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2020/03/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi there ? One year after the Atomic Energy Commission detonated a nuclear ?device? a quarter of a mile beneath the salt flats southeast of Carlsbad, N.M., the press was invited to enter the chamber created by the explosion. Knowing we would have to photograph the inside of a sphere, I borrowed a Leitz 21mm from a local doctor. It was something like 90 degrees in the shaft that led to the chamber. Adjacent to the chamber was a separate area where all the cameras had to be placed for 30 minutes because the temperature inside the chamber was around 130 degrees. The antechamber allowed the cameras to adjust to the heat. A camera brought from the shaft directly into the chamber immediately would fog up. Each photographer was allowed only 15 minutes. The AEC folks feared dehydration. The hero of the assignment was an AEC photographer who illuminated the entire chamber with Sylvania Sun Guns. It was all indirect lighting; not one Sun Gun was in sight. I set up the tripod, took a light meter reading and realized it was like photographing the interior of a cave. There was no sense of scale. I asked the technician assigned to monitor ? and to assist ? each photographer if he would stand on a rock and look up. After studying the overhead for possible falling rocks, he agreed. The photographer who was in line behind me was no less that LIFE staffer J. R. Eyerman. Later, when LIFE published his photograph, I was delighted to find he used the same man doing the same thing on the same rock. I shot both color and black-and-white. After the slides were processed, someone stole them. That?s not quite the whole story. A year after the assignment, I ran into the doctor at the local Leica camera store. ?It?s the strangest thing,? he said. ?Every element in that 21mm separated. The repairmen at E. Leitz say they have never seen anything like it.? I never told him. http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/Bill1941/RETROSPECT/Project+Gnome+Crater++1962+-+00204.jpg.html ?Bill