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How much uranium did Nazi Germany make? What the odds that ALL of it was the submarine U-234 , in the 540kg of 20%-40% enriched uranium?

Over 120 THOUSAND barrels of nuclear waste has been found in Germany in 2011.

Nazi nuclear waste from Hitler's secret A-bomb programme found in mine More than 126,000 barrels of nuclear material lie rotting over 2,000 feet below ground in an old salt mine near Hanover. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2014146/Nazi-nuclear-waste-Hitlers-secret-A-bomb-programme-mine.html

Lets think about this

We are told that:

* ALL of Germany's enriched uranium was on U-234

* The U-boat just happened to leave 2 weeks before Hitler died

* The U-boat just happened to take a coarse to Japan via the north Atlantic

* Oh there is more ...

[3] U-234, knowing Hitler was dead, just happened to move their coarse closer to the coast of the United States, where they just happen to be found by the US Navy, and they just happened to be relatively close to US shores

[4] And U-234 just happen to be one of the "few U-boats that was fitted with a FuMO-61 Hohentwiel U-Radar Transmitter."

[5] When we really think about it, it is NOT much of a stretch to think it is POSSIBLE that there was a plan in place, conspiring with the Nazi government, to move the enriched uranium to the United States that was produced in Germany.

Enriched in Auschwitz

[6] And other thoughts - "Hitler's Last Deadly Secret - U 864" ? Sank Feb 1945?

They say Hitler filled it with mercury. And it is so toxic, people cannot get close to it.

Really? Is this just a cover for anther submarine filled with enriched uranium?

[7] If the the United States was having THOUSANDS of TONS of rich uranium oxide ore being accumulated in Staten Island in the early 1940s (from the Shinkolobwe mine), why was the 640kg on U-234 that was confiscated in 1945 such a valuable find ?

Something doesn't add up here.

[8] It is almost like the US Government didn't want anyone to know that Germany had enriched uranium.

Are we reading this properly?

[9] Like @leytedriver said - The #HeavyWater method innovated by the Germans was key to their more-effective methods of enriching uranium

Deuterium oxide - The Girlder sulfide process

--->> This was operated by DuPont in the US, starting in 1945 <<------

[10] The Girlder Sulfide Process

"Karl-Hermann Geib and Jerome S. Spevack independently, and in parallel, invented the process in 1943[2] and its name derives from the Girdler company, which built the first American plant using the process. "

Ahem.. "Girdler Company" ???

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girdler_sulfide_process / 2019-02-15-wikipeda-girdler-sulfide-process.pdf

TEXT BOX

The Girdler sulfide (GS) process, also known as the Geib–Spevack (GS) process,[1] is an industrial production method for filtering out of natural water the heavy water (deuterium oxide = D2O) which is used in particle research, in Deuterium NMR spectroscopy, deuterated solvents for proton NMR spectroscopy, in heavy water nuclear reactors (as a coolant and moderator) and in deuterated drugs.

Karl-Hermann Geib and Jerome S. Spevack independently, and in parallel, invented the process in 1943[2] and its name derives from the Girdler company, which built the first American plant using the process.

The method is an isotopic exchange process between H2S and H2O ("light" water), that produces heavy water over several steps. It is a highly energy intensive process.[3] Seawater contains 180 parts per million of D2O.

Until its closure in 1997, the Bruce Heavy Water Plant in Ontario (located on the same site as Douglas Point and the Bruce Nuclear Generating Station) was the world's largest heavy water production plant, with a peak capacity of 1600 tonnes per year (800 tonnes per year per full plant, two fully operational plants at its peak). It used the Girdler sulfide process to produce heavy water, and required 340,000 tonnes (370,000 short tons) of feed water to produce 1 tonne (1.1 short tons) of heavy water.[4]

[11]

Girdler Company?

DuPont ?

Heavy Water?

Princeton?

Atomic Energy Commission - Under LP Gise?

All in one page?

This is quite a coincidence.

nationalregister.sc.gov/SurveyReports/…

[12] Some old #GirdlerCompany ads