Operation Davy Jones' Locker
Operation Davy Jones' Locker (or Davey) was a U.K. and U.S. military operation from 1946 to 1948. It involved the dumping at sea of captured German chemical weapons following the end of World War II.
Background
In the aftermath of the Nazi defeat in World War II, the occupying allies found large amounts of stockpiled German chemical weapons. They quickly convened the Continental Committee on Dumping and came to agreement pertaining to the destruction and disposal of the chemical stockpile. The allies decided that each of the four nations would destroy the German weapons, on their occupied territory, in whatever manner was most convenient. A total of 296,103 tons of chemical weapons were found, divided amongst each of the four zones of occupied Germany.[1] The name refers to Davy Jones' Locker, an idiom for the sea bottom.
Operation
The United States undertook Operation Davy Jones' Locker between June 1946 and August 1948, and it involved the scuttling of 38 ships containing between 30,000 and 40,000 tons of captured German chemical weapons.[2] Nine of the ships were scuttled in Skagerrak Strait in the Baltic Sea while two more were sunk in the North Sea.[1][2][3] The eleven ships were scuttled over the course of five separate dumpings in the region of Scandinavia.[1]
See also
- Germany and weapons of mass destruction
- Ocean disposal of radioactive waste
- Operation Sandcastle
Notes
- ^ a b c Chepesiuk, Ron. "A Sea of Trouble?" (Google books link) Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, September 1997, pp. 40-44, Vol. 53, No. 5, (ISSN 0096-3402).
- ^ a b Kaffka, Alexander V. and North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Scientific Affairs Division. Sea Dumped Chemical Weapons: Aspects, Problems, and Solutions, (Books link), Springer, 1996, pp. 31-38,(ISBN 0792340906).
- ^ Kassim and Barceló state that just two of the ships were sunk in the Baltic Sea, both in Skagerrak Strait.
References
- Kassim, Tarek A. and Barceló, Damià. Environmental Consequences of War and Aftermath, (Google Books link), Springer, 2009, p. 9, (ISBN 3540879617).
- v
- t
- e
centers and institutes
- 2nd Chemical Battalion
- U.S. Army Chemical Corps
- U.S. Army Edgewood Chemical Biological Center
- U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Chemical Defense (USAMRICD)
- U.S. Army Chemical Materials Activity
- Program Executive Office, Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives
- Chemical mortar battalion
- Anniston Army Depot
- Anniston Chemical Activity
- Blue Grass Army Depot
- Deseret Chemical Depot
- Edgewood Chemical Activity
- Hawthorne Army Depot
- Johnston Atoll Chemical Agent Disposal System
- Newport Chemical Depot
- Pine Bluff Chemical Activity
- Pueblo Chemical Depot
- Tooele Chemical Agent Disposal Facility
- Umatilla Chemical Depot
and projects
Research | |
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Operational | |
Disposal |
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- 3-Quinuclidinyl benzilate (BZ)
- Chlorine
- Methylphosphonyl difluoride (DF)
- Phosgene
- QL
- Sarin (GB)
- Mustard gas (HD)
- VX
- BLU-80/B Bigeye bomb
- M1 chemical mine
- M104 155 mm projectile
- M110 155 mm projectile
- M121 155 mm projectile
- M125 bomblet
- M134 bomblet
- M138 bomblet
- M139 bomblet
- M2 mortar
- M23 chemical mine
- M34 cluster bomb
- M360 105 mm projectile
- M426 8-inch shell
- M43 BZ cluster bomb
- M44 generator cluster
- M55 rocket
- M60 105 mm projectile
- M687 155 mm projectile
- XM736 8-inch projectile
- MC-1 bomb
- M47 bomb
- Weteye bomb