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No further explanation is required. Display cases show the shredded remains of a junior high-school uniform, the irradiated contents of a lunchbox and the frame of a tricycle β the small boy riding it was incinerated by the blast.
These harrowing exhibits are among the few physical reminders of the devastation that greeted survivors after the US B bomber Enola Gay released Little Boy, a kilotonne atomic bomb, over Hiroshima at 8.
Less than a minute later, the bomb exploded metres above Shima Hospital, creating a wave of heat that momentarily reached 3,, degrees centigrade on the ground. Winds of up to metres per second roared through the entire city.
Within half an hour, almost every building within a two-kilometre radius of the hypocentre was in flames. The bombed city was barely recognisable.
What a day earlier had been a sprawling military city and transportation hub, wedged between mountain ranges to the north and the Seto inland sea to the south, was now a nuclear wasteland. With the exception of a handful of concrete buildings, Hiroshima had ceased to exist. A day after the attack, Keiko Ogura, then an eight-year-old schoolgirl, could barely believe her eyes as she looked down on her hometown from a hill. Ogura, whose home narrowly escaped the firestorms, recalls seeing people shorn of their skin, almost indistinguishable from what remained of their clothes.