The picture has been widely shared for years and purportedly shows the aftermath of the explosion in the Japanese city.
The website “Visual archives of Hiroshima atomic bombing—Photographs and films in 1945” is now live and has been nominated for UNESCO’s Memory of the World Program. An English version is ...
When visitors step inside the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum in Japan, they’re faced with a photo of a large clock, hands ...
Photos of everyday artifacts that survived the Aug. 6, 1945, atomic bombing of Hiroshima are on display at the Carnegie International exhibition being held in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania until ...
In the hold was an experimental bomb, codenamed Little Boy. The target: Hiroshima. In Hiroshima the air raid sirens had sounded twice that morning already. On both occasions the all clear followed ...
It is 75 years since the US dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on 6 and 9 August, leading to the end of World War Two. The article contains graphic images and ...
A new book on the atomic bombing of Hiroshima focuses on one family's experience of the tragedy. The author says she hopes it will help underscore the value of peace and the human toll of nuclear ...
But Hiroshima has not been targeted. Although B-29 planes have been flying over the city, they never drop bombs. Japanese civilians have become so accustomed to the planes, they have given the B ...
Survivors of the Aug. 6, 1945, atomic bomb dropped ... changed her view of war and peace. “We had a societal commitment to violence. I bought into that also until I went to Hiroshima.
A tree surgeon in Hiroshima lovingly treats trees that live on around 8 decades after the A-bomb devastation. He intentionally leaves their scars intact as some of them near the end of their lives.