REDACTED: Declassified Mysteries with Luke Lamana - Nukes Below Zero
Episode Date: April 22, 2025During the Cold War, the US built a secret underground city 100 feet under Greenland’s ice cap. It was disguised as a research facility but was actually meant as a site to launch missiles a...t Russia. The project failed and turned into a radioactive wasteland. But in the end, this classified military project accidentally revolutionized climate science. Be the first to know about Wondery’s newest podcasts, curated recommendations, and more! Sign up now at https://wondery.fm/wonderynewsletterFollow Redacted: Declassified Mysteries with Luke Lamana on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. You can listen to new episodes early and ad-free on Wondery+. Join Wondery+ in the Wondery App, Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Start your free trial by visiting https://wondery.com/links/redacted/ now.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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It was summer 2017, but a blistering snow was pounding northern Greenland.
An environmental scientist struggled to drag a sled behind him, carrying a radar unit that
was crucial to his mission, but he could barely stay on his feet.
Hurricane-level winds whipped across the barren ice, pummeling him with snow.
He couldn't feel his nose, and ice was forming on his cheeks and upper lip.
But he kept his eyes trained on a bright orange triangle just a few yards ahead.
It was his tent, the only shelter from the storm, for more than a hundred miles in any
direction.
When he and his team of researchers landed in this wilderness a few days earlier, they'd
been lucky.
The temperature was below freezing, of course, but the skies were clear and sunny, so the
team was able to set up their tents and secure their heat and water sources.
But then the weather turned violent.
Now, as he trudged along, the wind hammered the scientist down to his knees.
He tried to stand, but couldn't find the strength.
So he crawled with the sled strapped to his shoulders, fighting
against a fresh torrent of powder in his face. If he didn't get inside, he could freeze
to death. He looked over his shoulder to make sure the radar unit was still on the sled,
but when he turned toward the tent again, all he could see was white. The tent was gone.
The scientist felt his stomach lurch, but fought the instinct to panic.
He had to stay calm and move in a straight line exactly where he knew his tent was or
he could miss it completely.
He crawled inch by inch through the whiteout until he finally spotted the bright orange
again, just two feet in front of his face.
The tent was half buried in snow.
He began to dig frantically until he found the zipper, ripped the door open and rolled
inside, dragging the radar unit behind him.
By the time he turned around to zip the door closed, a pile of snow was already collecting
inside the tent.
The tent walls flapped wildly from the winds outside. He pulled the
radar unit closer to him and turned it on, hoping it had captured the information that
he needed before the snowstorm set in. He held his breath until finally the unit beeped
to life. He smiled as images began appearing on the screen. They were proof of what he
and his team were looking for. That 100 feet beneath
his tent, buried in layers of ice, were the remains of an abandoned city. Once home to
more than 200 people, it was now a frozen relic. But the secrets it contained could
still be deadly. Alan Rarick was found dead in a parking lot in Oklahoma.
He's partly decomposed.
He'd been shot twice, once to the head.
It was a baffling tragedy.
You'd think his wife would be devastated.
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People began to wonder, who was Sandra Bridewell?
These guys didn't really see her coming.
This is the unbelievable story of a femme fatale
with a trail of bodies
in her wake and a lifetime of deception that has never been fully aired until now. If something
ever happened to me then they would know who did it. From Sony Music Entertainment, this is Fatal
Beauty, available now on the binge. Search for Fatal Beauty wherever you get your podcasts to start listening today.
On its surface, the story of Whole Foods is about how an idealistic founder made good on his dream of changing American food culture. But it's also a case study about the conflict between ambition and idealism and what gets lost on the way to the top.
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From Ballin Studios in Wondery, I'm Luke Lamanna,
and this is Redacted, Declassified Mysteries,
where each week we shine a light on the shadowy corners
of espionage, covert operations, and misinformation
to reveal the dark secrets our governments try to hide.
This week's episode is called Camp Century,
The City Beneath the Ice.
By many measures, the United States had it pretty good in the late 1950s.
Its citizens were some of the wealthiest people on earth.
They had a new technology, television, beaming entertainment right into their living rooms.
And President Dwight Eisenhower was a war hero who had led the allied armies to victory
in World War II.
But many Americans in 1958 were too nervous to enjoy their prosperity.
They feared they were losing the Cold War to the Soviet Union as the Russians took control
of the space race and built up an arsenal of nuclear weapons.
Just the year before, the Soviet Union developed technology that would allow them to launch
missiles at targets anywhere in the world, even into the United States itself.
And a few months after that, the Soviet Union shocked the world by launching Sputnik 1 into
orbit, the world's first artificial satellite.
Some military experts feared that the Americans were at such a disadvantage that the Soviets
could fire on multiple US
cities before Washington would even have time to respond.
President Eisenhower thought the public hand-wringing about nuclear war was overblown, but he also
knew he needed to do something dramatic to reassure the anxious public.
So he turned to his military leaders for bold ideas that would showcase American resolve
and ingenuity.
And the Army delivered something so radical it seemed like science fiction.
A secret underground military base in one of the coldest places on Earth.
Greenland.
The US already had a conventional military base there.
But this would be something else altogether.
It would be both a massive
military installation and a scientific research hub, a hundred feet below the ice cap.
The location just over the North Pole would be close enough to the Soviet border that
the Americans could keep a close eye on everything their rival did. It would be a new front line
of democracy. If Eisenhower's generals could pull
it off, the base would prove to the world that America could still innovate and inspire. No
matter what happened, the United States would not sit back and lose the Cold War. But a select few
inside our government knew that the base was intended to be more than just a surveillance station. Its true, darker purpose
remained hidden from the entire world for years.
In November 1957, Colonel John Kirkering sat across the dinner table from his wife, Marie.
He just got back home to Illinois after an army training mission, and not a moment too
soon.
That morning, the Soviets launched Sputnik 2 into orbit, and the entire country was in
an uproar.
On the Sputnik 2 craft, the Soviets launched a dog named Laika into space.
Everyone, even the Soviets, expected her to die of oxygen deprivation
the moment she left Earth's atmosphere. Instead, she survived several days, demonstrating
that the Soviets were learning how to put living creatures in space. Next, they would
send human beings. Then, maybe entire military bases would be orbiting around the planet,
far beyond the reach of American missiles.
When it came to space and weapons technology, the Soviets seemed to be leagues ahead of
the US.
Across the table, Marie looked pale over the news.
Kirkering kept glancing at the TV in the den.
He knew President Eisenhower was about to deliver an address, and they were both anxious
to hear what he would say.
When Eisenhower appeared on screen, Marie hurried over to turn up the volume.
The President sat solemnly behind his desk in the Oval Office, and said that while he
originally planned to deliver these remarks the following week, his message was too urgent
to delay.
Eisenhower announced that even though the Soviets were ahead in some missile and satellite developments, America's overall military strength was still the dominant
force in the world.
Kirkering knew the president was not being honest. Eisenhower was trying to calm a jittery
public. They were terrified of nuclear war. Kirkering himself had been an officer during
World War II in the South Pacific,
when the U.S. dropped two atomic bombs on Nagasaki and Hiroshima. It was up to him and
his colleagues to make sure nothing like that ever happened again. But as he watched his wife
listening nervously to Eisenhower's speech, he suddenly thought of another radical idea he
recently heard. It was a proposal from the Army Engineer Studies Center that, at first glance, seemed laughable.
It suggested the U.S. could build a new military base beneath Greenland's ice sheet where
temperatures routinely dropped to negative 50 degrees Fahrenheit.
But any such base posed enormous obstacles, including how to get building materials to
such a desolate place and how
to keep the lights on hundreds of feet below the ice cap.
The engineers proposed that, instead of running the base on diesel generators, they would
build a nuclear reactor.
The idea of a nuclear plant in the Arctic certainly sounded futuristic, but to Kirkering,
it made him uneasy.
Just a month ago, the world's first nuclear power
plant had gone up in flames after a physicist turned on the reactor too soon. And yet, for many
world leaders, including Eisenhower, nuclear power was still the way of the future.
Despite Kirkering's hesitation, he decided that the city beneath the ice deserved a second look.
Given the position the U.S. now found itself in.
It was hard for Kirkering to fathom the sheer magnitude of the project, but the country was staring down the barrel of complete annihilation.
America needed to reassert its dominance on the world stage, and Kirkering was in a position to help.
Kirkering was in a position to help. Eighteen months later, in May 1959, Kirkering bounced along in the passenger seat of an
Army snow vehicle called a Polcat, slowly making its way across Greenland's frozen
tundra.
They were losing daylight and still had a lot of work to do before sunset. Kirkering had spent months championing the construction of an underground military base
and research center here.
He was then appointed commanding officer of the project, leading a team from the Army's
Polar Research and Development Center.
He and his men were now on a reconnaissance mission.
The U.S. Army was counting on them to find a location for Camp Century. That's what they were
calling the base, since it would be located about 100 miles from the rim of the polar ice cap.
But so far, finding the right spot was proving to be an almost impossible task. They were looking
for a flat patch of ice, at least a half a mile long, that was close enough to an existing air
base to transport supplies. but at the same time,
far enough north that it wouldn't be affected by ice thaw every summer.
Kirkering sighed. Everywhere he looked, the terrain was bumpy, and now they were approaching
a hillside where the snow rose up in front of them like a white wall. Kirkering wasn't even
sure the Polkats could make it up the steep incline. His driver asked if they should try
to go around, but Kirkering said no, they had to push through. They had too much ground
to cover and no time for detours.
The driver hit the gas, pushing the Polkat uphill. Kirkering braced himself as the vehicle
rammed over ice patches and snowdrifts, throwing him against the side. He then looked back
to see if the other two Polkats following them were making it up the hill.
Finally, they reached the crest of the hill. Kirkering expected a steep decline on the
other side, but instead their Polkat leveled out onto a vast ice sheet. He told the driver
to stop.
Kirkering climbed out of the vehicle and onto the frozen ice sheet. The rest of the team
followed, taking in the icy expanse before them.
They were looking at a massive plateau, perhaps a mile wide,
still frozen solid despite the slightly above freezing weather.
For the first time that afternoon, Kirkering felt excited.
Two officers from the research center grabbed their surveying tools and hurried out onto the plateau.
They stabbed long measuring sticks into the ice, shouting that the ice sheet was completely
level.
They ran out further and measured again, still flat.
Kirkering smiled.
This spot could work.
Four months later, in September 1959, a group of Army engineers huddled around a table in
a makeshift mess hall on the ice, drinking hot coffee.
Outside, a snowstorm raged, and the engineers watched out the window as an entire morning
of work was buried in snow.
They'd spent all summer living in tents on Greenland's ice sheet, right where Kirkering
and his team first planted flags for Camp Century.
Unfortunately, these surprise snowstorms could ruin hours of work in a matter of minutes,
and with winter on their doorstep, the weather was only going to get worse.
Kirkering's second in command, Captain Thomas Evans, had been overseeing construction, and
every one of these setbacks upset his nerves. During second in command, Captain Thomas Evans had been overseeing construction, and every
one of these setbacks upset his nerves.
He stood at the mess hall window, feeling antsy as he downed his coffee.
Even with their weather challenges, they'd made amazing progress over the summer, but
they still had to complete the most important part of the project, the energy wing, where
the nuclear reactor would live.
Evans was running out of time before winter
made construction impossible. Technically, the engineers didn't have permission from
Denmark, which owned Greenland, to start construction. The Danes were nervous that installing a nuclear-powered
military base so close to the Soviet Union could be seen as an act of aggression, and
the Soviets could retaliate. But Evans and his team didn't want to squander Greenland's brief summer waiting for Denmark's
approval, so they started on the project anyway. They spent three months drilling and digging into
the ice, slowly carving out the tunnels that would become the camp. It had been the most
grueling assignment of Evans' career. Evans and his team had already dug the central tunnel, called Main Street, that ran the length
of the camp, about 1100 feet long and 26 feet wide.
They had also dug the 25 other tunnels that branched off from it and would eventually
house the mess hall, soldiers' living quarters, and research labs.
All of it was essentially invisible from where Evans was standing.
It mostly looked like a barren tundra, except for a narrow entrance way into the camp.
The only other side of the underground base was an open trench that would eventually be
the tunnel where the nuclear power plant would be located.
The work crews were eager to finish the tunnel before winter set in, or they'd never meet
their deadline of having the camp fully powered by next summer.
The US was already behind in the nuclear arms race.
They couldn't afford more delays.
The snowstorm finally died down around 5 pm, but the Arctic sun was still bright overhead,
giving the men several more hours to work.
Evans led the team out of the mess hall so they could survey the damage to the trench
where several feet of snow had collected. It would take the rest of the day to clear it out. Evans
ordered his team to fire up their massive snow plows and get to work. They'd be out
here till midnight, if that's what it took. Then he headed over to the entrance tunnel
that led down into the belly of the camp. Almost as soon as he entered, daylight disappeared,
replaced by strings of industrial lights overhead.
The floors were made of packed snow that crunched beneath his feet.
The walls were made of metal, but they were covered in a thick layer of frost.
Other than his footsteps, it was so quiet underground that sometimes, Evans felt like
he was walking into a tomb.
But halfway down Main Street, he heard the banging of hammers coming from the far end
of the tunnel.
It was the other project he wanted to check on, the prefabricated houses.
The tunnels of Camp Century would be full of wooden structures that were built back
in the U.S.
The engineers couldn't heat the snowy tunnels of the camp or they would melt, but they could
heat these small houses where soldiers would live.
Evans thought the wooden houses helped make the camp feel like a home.
That would be important during long winter nights, when everyone here would essentially
be trapped, and to help convince the public that an underground city was a viable way
of escaping nuclear attack.
That was one of the main reasons this project had been approved.
Though few people talked publicly about it, Eisenhower needed to show Americans that
they were safe from the Soviets, even if that meant hiding them away beneath layers and
layers of ice.
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Ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha.
Ha ha ha.
In the summer of 1960, Captain James Barnett beamed as he led a camera crew into the energy
wing at Camp Century.
Beside him walked the most trusted journalist in America, Walter Cronkite.
He'd come to tour the camp as a part of a documentary series called 20th Century.
It was Barnett's job to dazzle him, and by extension, the American public.
The goal was to tout the country's nuclear future and assure Americans that their government would
go to any length to keep them safe. Barnett led Cronkite through a snowy archway and passed a
construction area, where six or seven engineers were building wooden platforms that would soon
hold reactor equipment. He stopped at a wooden railing that surrounded a deep hole in the snow floor.
Barnett told Cronkite to lean over the railing and look down. Far below was the camp's
water well, created by using steamers that melted the ice beneath the camp. Cronkite
asked Barnett how old the water was. Barnett responded,
We probably start off with 100 year old water and end up with a 500 foot hole with several
thousand year old water.
So water that's thousands of years old is running man's newest means of creating power.
Yes sir.
Barnett explained that the water they melted in this wing would power the nuclear reactor. Nuclear
energy was foreign to most of the viewers at home, so he explained how it worked. He
said the water would keep the nuclear reactor from overheating, and it would also produce
steam that could be turned into electricity by the turbines. Then, Barnett led Cronkite
further down the reactor tunnel, until they arrived at a simple plywood building. Barnett knew it didn't look like much from the outside, but he told Cronkite further down the reactor tunnel, until they arrived at a simple plywood building.
Barnett knew it didn't look like much from the outside, but he told Cronkite that this
was the heart of the nuclear reactor.
As Barnett led the camera crew inside, he showed off a dizzying network of pipes and
turbines running up the walls and across the ceiling until they reached the nuclear reactor
core.
A crew was already working around it, unloading uranium rods and testing them.
Barnett told Cronkite that soon these rods would be lowered into the reactor's core
and the plant would be ready to power Camp Century.
Later that day, Barnett stood next to Captain Evans outside the entrance to the camp.
He lit up a cigarette and watched as Walter Cronkite filmed the final segment for his
documentary.
Barnett knew it was the right question.
They only had a few months to finish building the nuclear reactor and convince Americans,
Denmark and most of all, the Soviets, that Camp Century was worth the investment.
On August 13, 1960, Colonel John Kirkering strode down the middle of Camp Century's
Main Street, flanked by a delegation of American and Danish diplomats. In 1960, Colonel John Kirkering strode down the middle of Camp Century's main street,
flanked by a delegation of American and Danish diplomats.
They were all here for an inspection, and Kirkering desperately needed it to go well
because tension was building between the US and Denmark.
The Danish were angry that the Americans started building the camp two months before they officially
approved the project.
They were also concerned about a subterranean nuclear power plant on their soil that could
discharge radioactive waste into the ice sheet, and they wanted to know who would pay for
the cleanup if the underground reactor exploded.
Privately, the Danish government had another big worry.
They suspected that the US would use this base to advance nuclear weapon technology,
something they wanted no part of.
They had no interest in helping the US prepare for nuclear war.
But most of all, the Danes were upset with the amount of media coverage the camp was
generating.
The US had given documentary footage to American media outlets, creating a frenzy of interest
back in the States.
Americans were fascinated with the camp, which was exactly what Kirkering had been counting
on.
If all the US was on board for the project, it would be harder for the Danish government
to pull the plug.
Kirkering understood the Danish concerns.
He just needed to convince them that Camp Century's potential outweighed its risks.
The U.S. had spent the equivalent of $90 million in today's dollars building and assembling
the base, which was on track to be completed in about six weeks.
Almost three-quarters of that went into building the nuclear reactor.
Kirkering reminded himself that the only thing the delegates needed to see today was progress.
Kirkering had brought Captain Evans along for the tour as well, since Evans had been
at the camp since day one and could give the delegates a taste of what life was like for
the soldiers under the ice.
The tour group walked into a long wooden building that was outfitted with various kinds of science
equipment.
A few scientists were working at a long table, and Kirkering let Captain Evans explain their
current project.
They were drilling and extracting ice cores.
Each of the cores had visible layers from every year's cycle of freezing and melting,
like rings on a tree.
A single ice core contained about 100,000 years of Earth's climate history, providing
a critical understanding of the weather
that shaped the world.
Kirkering noticed one Danish diplomat lean in,
look of interest on his face.
It seemed the icy relationship between Denmark
and the United States was thawing before his eyes.
A few weeks later, in September 1960, an 18-year-old Danish soldier named Soren Gregersen walked
into the mess hall at a Danish military base an hour outside of Copenhagen.
He was brand new to the army, but he was adjusting well to his new home.
As he waited in line for breakfast, one of the officers handed him a newspaper and told
him to take a look.
He flipped it over and there, below the fold, was his name in print.
It said, Soren Gregersen, selected by the U.S. Army and Danish Ministry of Defense,
to spend five months working as a junior scientific aide at Camp Century in Greenland.
Gregersen couldn't help but smile.
He'd gotten the call about this opportunity a few days ago
and had been ecstatic,
but seeing his name in print made it feel official.
The U.S. and Denmark had finally put their differences aside
and joined forces to lead Camp Century into the future.
Gregorsen was a former Boy Scout
from a small coastal town in Denmark
with dreams of studying
atomic science, so he jumped at the chance to live and work at the base.
He couldn't believe that the Danish Ministry of Defense had chosen his application.
The article said he was as lucky as Aladdin finding the magic lamp, and Gregersen had
to agree.
He didn't know much about what his work at the base would entail, but he knew that the
Americans would also be sending their own Boy Scout to live and work with him, a fellow
18-year-old from Kansas named Kent Goring.
They wouldn't just be junior aides at the camp, they would be symbols of diplomacy between
the U.S. and Denmark.
Now that Denmark was officially on board with Camp Century, it was important for them to
show a united front. Denmark. Now that Denmark was officially on board with Camp Century, it was important for them to
show a united front.
Gregorsen tucked the newspaper under his arm and grabbed a breakfast tray.
It was going to be hard to concentrate on anything else over the next few weeks.
Soon, he'd be 100 feet below the surface of Greenland, living in the world's only
subterranean nuclear-Powered Military Base.
In early November 1960, Gregorson shivered inside his parka as he ambled down the mess
hall tunnel at Camp Century.
He had been given a bundle of little plastic pegs and sent to press them into the tunnel
wall.
Something he was told was routine maintenance. His new American friend,
Kent Goring, was behind him, placing pegs along the opposite wall. They had been at the camp for a
month, living and working alongside roughly 200 engineers, scientists, and soldiers. Gregorson had
been enjoying his time in this underground fortress. He was shocked at how big it was,
and how the army seemed to meet every possible need.
In addition to the housing and mess hall, there was a barber shop, a library, even a
movie theater.
The food was surprisingly good too.
He'd been expecting to rough it.
Instead, he was getting full-steak dinners.
Everyone got double portions because Captain Evans wanted to keep morale up among the men.
Until now, Gregorson and Goring had been doing fun stuff.
They watched soldiers test gas masks,
they got to use the radio to call a nearby weather station,
and they played chess with the meteorological team.
By comparison, their current assignment
with the bags of pegs was boring.
Even though Gregorsen knew it was the most important job
he'd been given at the camp,
the engineers would use these pegs to measure how much the tunnel walls had closed in that
week.
When Colonel Kirkering chose this location for Camp Century, he had hoped that the extremely
cold temperatures would keep the ice around the tunnels frozen solid, but the camp generators
churned out a lot of heat, and they were slowly melting the ice.
Meanwhile, fresh snowfalls were causing
the ice all around them to shift. As a result, the tunnel floors were rising while the ceiling
was getting lower, and the engineer corps had to constantly widen the tunnels.
Gregorsen moved down the wall, inserting pegs along the way, until he reached one of the smaller
passageways connected to Main Street. He turned the corner and stopped dead. A week ago, the corridor had been tall enough for him to walk
through. Now, the ceiling was so low, he'd almost have to bend in half. He knew the smaller corridors
were closing in faster than the wider tunnels, but he'd never seen the ice shift this fast.
He was suddenly aware of just how far underground they were.
They were completely isolated from anyone who might be able to help if something went
wrong.
Gregorson called down the tunnel to Goring and said he was going to report the ice melt
to the engineers directly.
He reassured himself that they must know what they were doing and that there was no way
they'd let the tunnels collapse.
About a month later, in December 1960, Gregorsen stood in the nuclear reactor tunnel, feeling
a mix of nerves and excitement.
Until now, the reactor team had encountered problem after problem with the
reactor, and today was the first time Gregerson would see it up and running. For weeks, every
time the engineers turned on the reactor, it would give off so much radiation they'd
have to shut it down immediately. They'd ordered sheets of lead to install around it
to reduce the radiation releases. But winter weather was delaying their delivery, so the
reactor team came up
with a makeshift solution. They told Gregerson and Goring to begin sawing frozen blocks of
wood into piles of sawdust. Then they told them to shove the sawdust into plastic bags
and fill them with water from the well. This waterlogged sawdust would be used to block
the radiation until the lead arrived. Once they finished filling the bags,
an engineer fired up the reactor for the first time in weeks. At last, they would find out if
all the time and money they had spent on the reactor was worth it. Gregorson held his breath
and watched the operator monitoring the radiation levels, waiting for a signal that the levels were
rising. But minutes ticked by, and the monitor remained
calm. After 20 minutes, a small cheer broke out among the team. Gregorsen joined in. He realized
how tense the room had been, how everyone had been waiting for the radiation levels to skyrocket.
But they never did. He asked if they were going to switch the camp over to the nuclear power system
now, but the team leader said not yet. First, they'd give it an hour, just to make sure all the systems were a go. After 50 minutes
passed, the anticipation in the air was palpable. The whole team inched closer to the reactor,
willing the hour mark to finally come. Then, alarms began shrieking. Gregorson looked to the
control board, where he saw one of the
engineers lunging for the reactor's off switch. Out of nowhere, the radiation had skyrocketed.
They were now in danger. Gregorsen looked at Goring, who was already running for the bags
of wet sawdust. He dashed after him, grabbing a bag and tossing the sawdust around the reactor,
trying his best to fully surround it. They hoped that the hydrogening the sawdust around the reactor, trying his best to fully surround it.
They hoped that the hydrogen in the sawdust would soak up the radiation and keep everyone safe.
Once the reactor was packed in sawdust, Gregerson and Goering scrambled toward the back wall, trying to stay out of the way, as engineers started yelling at one another about what went wrong.
Gregerson wasn't sure what to do, but he understood how bad this failure was for the
entire camp.
Their main energy source didn't work.
He glanced at Goring, and both of them headed down the hall.
They'd just be in the way if they hung around.
Once they were out of earshot, Goring told Gregorson he was nervous about all the radiation
coming from the reactor.
He was beginning to wonder whether the army knew what they were doing down here.
One wrong move and that reactor could blow and take the whole camp along with it.
Gregorson shook his head.
The reactor team said the camp was safe.
He wanted to believe that, but he knew that there were countless signs that they were
on the brink of disaster.
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More than three years later, in July 1963, Captain Barnett was seething as he stalked
down the reactor tunnel and told his
team he had an announcement to make.
As the crew crowded around, Barnett stared grimly at the quiet reactor core, which hadn't
been running for weeks.
He and his team had spent countless hours trying to fix it, but it never worked long
enough to power the base for more than a few days at a time.
The radioactivity levels made it too dangerous, even after the lead shield had been installed.
Before he could say anything, Barnett looked at his team and sighed.
He knew what he was about to say would make them furious, but he wanted to tell them in
person.
The US government was pulling the plug on Camp Century.
Barnett said he hadn't even found out from the military.
He had been sent a stack of newspapers from home and happened to stumble upon a story
about it.
As predicted, the team was outraged.
They were literally the last people on Earth to find out that their own program was getting
axed.
The article called the reactor obsolete, especially compared
to the Navy's newest technology, Polaris submarines. These high-tech subs were capable
of launching nuclear missiles while still submerged underwater, meaning that the US
could now send missiles anywhere in the world, virtually undetected. That was a far better
investment than a stationary nuclear reactor somewhere north of the Arctic
Circle.
The Navy had officially pulled the US ahead of the Soviet Union's missile capabilities.
By comparison, the Army's work at Camp Century was a failure.
Barnett didn't know what to say.
As a captain, he was good at giving orders.
But this morning, he didn't have any.
So he just thanked his team for being part of the project and told them to be proud of
the work they did.
Tonight, they could drown their sorrows however they saw fit.
He dismissed his crew for the rest of the morning, then headed out to find Captain Evans.
They needed to speak with Colonel Kirkering and plan the closure of the plant.
As he walked through the corridors, a low groan echoed overhead.
It was the sound of the ice sheet shifting above him.
Barnett realized that this project had always been on borrowed time.
Maybe he'd been too naive not to see that.
But as it turned out, the base had another mission, one that would remain a mystery for
decades.
In 1997, 33 years after the nuclear reactor was turned off for good, Soren Gregersen was
settling into his office at the University of Copenhagen.
He was 55 years old now and a professor of seismology.
In the three decades since his internship at Camp Century, he'd made a name for himself
studying earthquakes and geophysics.
Over the years he'd also given interviews about his adventure at Camp Century.
He'd always spoke fondly about the five months he spent there.
But as the years passed, the world forgot about the frozen city, and eventually people
stopped asking about it altogether. the years passed, the world forgot about the frozen city, and eventually people stopped
asking about it altogether.
That morning, Gregorsen took a sip of coffee and started leafing through the stack of newspapers
on his crowded desk, and a headline caught him by surprise.
It was an article about Camp Century.
He began reading.
Then his stomach dropped.
According to the article, a leaked document discovered by a Danish historian showed that
Camp Century had not just been a research facility and military base, it had also been
a front for a covert operation called Project Iceworm.
If Camp Century's nuclear program had been successful, the US Army had planned to secretly
extend the camp. They wanted to build nuclear
missile launch sites deep beneath Greenland's ice sheet that would be capable of striking Moscow.
And they had plans to build and stockpile more than 600 nuclear missiles within these secret annexes.
But the technical difficulties proved too great, so Project Iceworm never went into
effect.
Gregorson couldn't believe it.
He had thought he was on the frontier of science and human ingenuity.
But the whole time, this bold and innovative science experiment was actually just a potential
front for a dangerous Cold War game.
His mind flashed back to all the time he had spent wandering around those
slowly collapsing tunnels. He shuffled through the papers on his desk until he found that day's
copy of the Danish newspaper Politiken. It was the same paper that announced he would be joining
Camp Century back in 1960. Now he scanned the paper to see if it was also reporting on Project
Iceworm. Sure enough, one article
stated that the Danish government should have been more suspicious about Camp Century from the
beginning. Maybe he should have been more suspicious too. He hated the idea that he
unknowingly contributed to something that could have been turned into a weapon of war.
And he had to wonder, what else would they discover about Camp Century,
now that more
and more documents were being leaked?
Gregorson would sit with those questions until the day he died, in 2023.
A year later, NASA radar revealed that after six decades, Camp Century was still relatively
intact and tombed under 100 feet of ice.
But now the camp had a new problem – global warming.
Greenland's melting ice sheet threatened to expose the camp and all the radioactive
and toxic waste that the U.S. Army left behind.
Captain James Barnett's team removed the nuclear reactor from Camp Century in 1964,
the same year most of the staff left.
And by 1967, the camp was abandoned altogether.
Everything besides the reactor was left intact under the ice.
The once-bold experiment is now largely seen as a failure, but it wasn't a total bust.
The research station ended up being the most fruitful part of the camp's existence.
The scientific data collected from those ice cores set the groundwork for the emerging
field of paleoclimatology, the study of climates of the past.
It's used to understand historical climate patterns and compare them to current climate
changes caused by greenhouse gas emissions.
Much of what we currently understand about climate change is thanks in part to the scientists who worked at Camp Century.
Today, Greenland's government and climate activists are calling for a cleanup of the remnants of the camp.
An estimated 53,000 gallons of diesel fuel and more than six million gallons of radioactive waste were left behind.
If that waste were to somehow leak, the results could be catastrophic and poison water far
beyond Greenland.
In 2017, the Danish government sent a team of researchers to the spot where Camp Century
once stood.
Their job was to test the ice for dangerous levels of radiation.
They reported that the ice above Camp Century is not yet radioactive, and that the camp
will likely stay frozen beneath the ice until the year 2100.
But the team have been sworn to secrecy by the Danish government not to reveal the rest
of their findings.
Today, the U.S. is trying to buy Greenland, not because its location provides military
benefits, but because of the shipping lanes that have opened in the Arctic, largely due
to climate change.
Follow redacted, declassified mysteries hosted by me, Luke Lamanna, on the Wondery app or
wherever you get your podcasts. of the world. Before you go, tell us about yourself by completing a short survey at Wondery.com slash survey.
From Ballin Studios in Wondery, this is Redacted, Declassified Mysteries, hosted by me, Luke
Lamanna.
A quick note about our stories.
We do a lot of research, but some details and scenes are dramatized.
We used many different sources for our show, but we especially recommend the book Camp
Century, the untold story of America's secret Arctic military base under the Greenland
ice, by Henry Nielsen, Walter Cronkite's 1961 report for CBS, The City Under the Ice,
and the documentary, The Hidden City Beneath
Greenland's Ice.
This episode was written by Aaron Lann.
Sound Design by Ryan Patesta.
Our producers are Christopher B. Dunn and John Reed.
Our associate producers are Ines Reniquet and Molly Quinlan-Ardwick.
Fact-checking by Sheila Patterson.
For Ballin Studios, our Head of Production is Zach Levitt.
Script Editing by Scott Allen.
Our Coordinating Producer is Samantha Collins.
Production Support by Avery Siegel.
Produced by me, Luke Lamanna.
Executive Producers are Mr. Ballin and Nick Witters.
For Wondery, our Senior Producers are Laura Donna Palavota, Dave Schilling, and Rachel Engelman.
Senior Managing Producer is Nick Ryan.
Managing producer is Olivia Fonte.
Executive producers are Ariel Flaherty
and Marshall Louie for Wondery.
Hey, I'm Cassie DePeckel, the host of Wondery's podcast Against the Odds. In each episode, we share thrilling true stories of survival, putting you in the shoes of the
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