French nuclear test Licorne, Mururoa Atoll, French Polynesia, 3 July 1970. This explosion in its many stages appears all over the internet misidentified as the Canopus blast from August 1968. However, this photo is from 'Atolls de l'atome', a definitive book about French nuclear testing in the Pacific, and are there identified by author Bernard Dumortier as Licorne. via pulpinternational.com

10 August 2012 (ABC) – The Nuclear Association in French Polynesia has raised concerns that Murorua Atoll, the site of French nuclear testing in the Pacific, is in danger of collapsing. Murorua e Tatou says the issue was detailed in a leaked report from the Ministry of Defence to the French government dated March 2010. The Nuclear Association’s president, Roland Oldham, told Radio Australia’s Pacific Beat program that radioactive material could be released into the Pacific Ocean if the atoll were to collapse. “Just in that little area there is over maybe twelve underground tests in that area and we have to remember that France have done altogether 193 nuclear test explosions in Murorua,” he said. “In the soil of Muroroa, if something happens there is about 150 holes containing very dangerous radioactivity.” The association says if the atoll were to collapse it could also trigger a 15 metre tsunami. Mr Oldham is concerned the government didn’t make the report available to the public earlier. “This information was very discreet, I mean we only got this information now,” he said. “I mean the report is from 2010, why wait so long? “So the public is not very aware of this situation.” Mr Oldham says the report doesn’t properly emphasise the serious threat posed by the buried radioactive material. “In this report that we got not too long ago, they’re not even talking about radioactivity,” he said. “The way they present it it’s like it’s not very dangerous.” Mr Oldham says the association has been trying to raise the issue with the government and public. “We’ve been trying to raise the consciousness of the people – our own people and our government and all the rest about this really frightening thing that could happen if actually one part of Murorua would collapse,” he said. […]

Nuclear fears over French Polynesia atoll collapse via Ex-SKF