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  1. Another broken arrow incident in South Carolina occurred just a month later, on March 11, 1958. This incident also involved a B-47. In this incident, the bomber took off from Hunter Air Force Base in South Carolina en route to the United Kingdom. The bomber was carrying a Mark-6 nuclear weapon. This incident wasn’t a case of a collision or a ...

  2. May 12, 2023 · It was forced to dump the reactors into the sea, and they have never been found. The most well-known broken arrow occurred on January 17, 1966, near Palomares, Spain. A U.S. B-52 aircraft carrying ...

  3. Nov 16, 2021 · They last wrote for Aviation History in the July 2019 issue about a Broken Arrow incident in 1958 near Savannah, Ga. (see “Amazing Story of the Lost H-Bomb”). Further reading: Broken Arrow: The Declassified History of U.S. Nuclear Weapons Accidents, by Michael H. Maggelet and James C. Oskins.

  4. The 1950 Rivière-du-Loup B-50 nuclear weapon loss incident refers to loss of a nuclear weapon near Rivière-du-Loup, Quebec, Canada, during the fall of 1950. The bomb was released due to engine troubles, and then was destroyed in a non-nuclear detonation before it hit the ground.

  5. Dec 10, 2018 · Remembering the cold war Broken Arrow incident at Bunker Hill Air Force Base which killed crew member 'Rocky" Cervantes in 1964. ... A B-58 Hustler, the worlds first supersonic bomber, is ...

  6. The US military's first "broken arrow" incident occurred when a B-36 crew lost a Mark IV atomic bomb over the Canadian wilderness. ... "Broken arrow" refers to when a nuclear weapon is stolen ...

  7. Broken Arrow [ edit ] On 21 January 1968, a B-52G Stratofortress, serial number 58-0188, with the callsign "HOBO 28" [9] from the 380th Strategic Bomb Wing at Plattsburgh Air Force Base , New York was assigned the "Hard Head" mission over Thule and nearby Baffin Bay . [10]

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