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LivingCorpse commented at 2021-08-13 14:44:09 » #2638824
Interesting enough, Nagato was sunk in 1952 by "normal" fission nuclear bomb, two years before Godzilla was (in his original film) exposed to radiation from a thermonuclear bomb or what we more commonly know as fusion-fission bombs, hydrogen bombs or simply H-bombs.
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Interesting enough, Nagato was sunk in 1952 by "normal" fission nuclear bomb, two years before Godzilla was (in his original film) exposed to radiation from a thermonuclear bomb or what we more commonly know as fusion-fission bombs, hydrogen bombs or simply H-bombs.
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LivingCorpse commented at 2021-08-13 14:58:17 » #2638829
Oops my bad, there is an 8 year difference, Nagato sunk in 1946. Godzilla would be exposed to in 1954.
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Oops my bad, there is an 8 year difference, Nagato sunk in 1946. Godzilla would be exposed to in 1954.
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LivingCorpse commented at 2021-08-13 15:00:55 » #2638830
But interesting enough Nagato would go through two nuclear bombs before sinking and the one that made Godzilla were all tested in the same place, the Bikini Atoll of the Marshall Islands.
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But interesting enough Nagato would go through two nuclear bombs before sinking and the one that made Godzilla were all tested in the same place, the Bikini Atoll of the Marshall Islands.
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LivingCorpse commented at 2021-08-13 16:17:49 » #2638845
The reason they tie Godzilla to the 1954 tests and not the 1946 tests Nagato went through is because they find traces of Strontium-90 in Godzilla's footprints, a byproduct of hydrogen bombs.
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The reason they tie Godzilla to the 1954 tests and not the 1946 tests Nagato went through is because they find traces of Strontium-90 in Godzilla's footprints, a byproduct of hydrogen bombs.
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