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History Daily

The Three Mile Island Nuclear Accident

History Daily

Airship | Noiser | Wondery

History

4.42.1K Ratings

🗓️ 28 March 2023

⏱️ 19 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

March 28, 1979. The worst nuclear accident in American history begins when Pennsylvania's Three Mile Island power plant experiences a partial meltdown.


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Transcript

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0:00.0

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0:03.7

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0:06.0

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0:21.3

It's March 28, 1979, at the 3-mile island nuclear power station near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

0:28.6

It's a few minutes before 4 a.m., and the shift foreman, Frederick Shimon, is attending to some

0:33.4

paperwork in his office. In the basement below, two other men, Donald Miller and Harold Farst,

0:39.6

are taking care of some routine maintenance, and as the clock nears 4 a.m. on the dot,

0:44.6

Frederick decides to check in on their progress.

0:49.6

On arriving, Frederick finds Donald and Harold cleaning out the pipes that feed and purify

0:54.4

cooling water into one of the plant's reactors. Donald beckons Frederick over and explains that

0:59.6

there's a slight plumbing problem. One of the pipes that carries away impurities is blocked.

1:04.6

He goes on to explain that they've been trying for the best part of an hour to flush away the

1:08.4

blockage, but it's yet to budge. Frederick frowns, because this is unusual. He appears into a glass

1:16.4

window on one of the pipes to try and figure out what the issue might be, but as he inspects the

1:21.2

machinery closer, he hears a sudden loud crashing news. And then the building's loudspeakers

1:28.7

blare an alarm that there has been a turbine trip, a reactor trip. Frederick rushes to the control

1:34.8

room, where he finds workers in a frenzy. No one is sure what to do, because most, Frederick included

1:41.4

received little training to work at the plant, let alone handle any kind of meltdown.

1:46.0

But as they argue over what to do first, the crashing sound stops. Frederick looks at the clock.

1:52.6

It's 37 seconds past 4 a.m., and the reactor has shut down. Immediately the automatic

1:58.7

emergency cooling system begins. But when Frederick and his team check the water readings,

2:03.4

they determine that there is too much cooling water in the reactor. So they shut off the

...

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