Protect and Survive
This booklet tells you how to make your home and
family as safe as possible under nuclear attack |
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Foreword
If the country were ever faced with an immediate
threat of nuclear war, a copy of this booklet would be distributed to
every household as part of a public information campaign which would
include announcements on television and radio and in the press. The
booklet has been designed for free and general distribution in that event.
It is being placed on sale now for those who wish to know what they would
be advised to do at such a time.
May 1980
If Britain is attacked by nuclear bombs or by missiles, we do not know
what targets will be chosen or how severe the assault will be.
If nuclear weapons are used on a large scale, those of us living in the
country areas might be exposed to as great a risk as those in the towns.
The radioactive dust, falling where the wind blows it, will bring the most
widespread dangers of all. No part of the United Kingdom can be considered
safe from both the direct effects of the weapons and the resultant
fall-out.
The dangers which you and your family will face in this situation can
be reduced if you do as this booklet describes.
Read this booklet with care Your life and the
lives of your family may depend upon it
Do as it advises Keep it safely at
hand
Challenge to survival
Everything within a certain distance of a nuclear explosion will be
totally destroyed. Even people living outside this area will be in danger
from -
HEAT AND BLAST
FALL-OUT
Heat and Blast
The heat and blast are so severe that they can kill, and destroy
buildings, for up to five miles from the explosion. Beyond that, there can
be severe damage.
Fall-out
Fall-out is dust that is sucked up from the ground by the explosion. It
can be deadly dangerous. It rises high in the air and can be carried by
the winds for hundreds of miles before falling to the ground. The
radiation from this dust is dangerous. It cannot be seen or felt. It has
no smell, and it can be detected only by special instruments. Exposure to
it can cause sickness and death. If the dust fell on or around your home,
the radiation from it would be a danger to you and your family for many
days after an explosion. Radiation can penetrate any material, but its
intensity is reduced as it passes through - so the thicker and denser the
material is, the better.
Planning for survival
Stay at Home
Your own local authority will best be able to help you in war. If you
move away - unless you have a place of your own to go to or intend to live
with relatives - the authority in your new area will not help you with
accommodation or food or other essentials. If you leave, your local
authority may need to take your empty house for others to use. So stay
at home.
Plan a Fall-out
Room and Inner Refuge
The first priority is to provide shelter within your home against
radioactive fall-out. Your best protection is to make a fall-out room and
build an inner refuge within it.
First, the Fall-out
Room
Because of the threat of radiation you and your family may need to live
in this room for fourteen days after an attack, almost without leaving it
at all. So you must make it as safe as you can, and equip it for your
survival. Choose the place furthest from the outside walls and from the
roof, or which has the smallest amount of outside wall. The further you
can get, within your home, from the radioactive dust that is on or around
it, the safer you will be. Use the cellar or basement if there is one.
Otherwise use a room, hall or passage on the ground floor.
Even the safest room in your home is not safe enough, however. You will
need to block up windows in the room, and any other openings, and to make
the outside walls thicker, and also to thicken the floor above you, to
provide the strongest possible protection against the penetration of
radiation. Thick, dense materials are the best, and bricks, concrete or
building blocks, timber, boxes of earth, sand, books, and furniture might
all be used.
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Flats
If you live in a block of flats there are other factors to consider. If
the block is five stories high or more, do not shelter in the top two
floors. Make arrangements now with your landlord for alternative shelter
accommodation if you can, or with your neighbours on the lower floors, or
with relatives or friends. If your flat is in a block of four storeys
or less, the basement or ground floor will give you the best protection.
Central corridors on lower floors will provide good protection. |
Bungalows
Bungalows and similar single-storey homes will not give much
protection. Arrange to shelter with someone close by if you can do
so. If not, select a place in your home that is furthest from the roof
and the outside walls, and strengthen it as has been described.
Caravans
If you live in a caravan or other similar accommodation
which provides very little protection against fall-out your local
authority will be able to advise you on what to do. |
Now the Inner
Refuge
Still greater protection is necessary in the fall-out room,
particularly for the first two days and nights after an attack, when the
radiation dangers could be critical. To provide this you should build an
inner refuge. This too should be thick-lined with dense materials to
resist the radiation, and should be built away from the outside walls.
Here are some ideas:
1. Make a 'lean-to' with sloping doors
taken from rooms above or strong boards rested against an inner wall.
Prevent them from slipping by fixing a length of wood along the floor.
Build further protection of bags or boxes of earth or sand - or books, or
even clothing - on the slope of your refuge, and anchor these also against
slipping. Partly close the two open ends with boxes of earth or sand, or
heavy furniture.
2. Use tables if they are large enough
to provide you all with shelter. Surround them and cover them with heavy
furniture filled with sand, earth, books or clothing.
3. Use the cupboard under the stairs if
it is in your fall-out room. Put bags of earth or sand on the stairs and
along the wall of the cupboard. If the stairs are on an outside wall,
strengthen the wall outside in the same way to a height of six feet.
PLAN YOUR SURVIVAL
KIT
Five essentials for survival in your Fall-out
Room
1 Drinking Water
You will need enough for the family for fourteen days. Each person
should drink two pints a day - so for this you will need three and a half
gallons each. You should try to stock twice as much water as you are
likely to need for drinking, so that you will have enough for washing. You
are unlikely to be able to use the mains water supply after an attack - so
provide your drinking water beforehand by filling bottles for use in the
fall-out room. Store extra water in the bath, in basins and in other
containers. Seal or cover all you can. Anything that has fall-out dust
on it will be contaminated and dangerous to drink or to eat. You cannot
remove radiation from water by boiling it.
2 Food
Stock enough food for fourteen days. Choose foods which can be
eaten cold, which keep fresh, and which are tinned or well wrapped. Keep
your stocks in a closed cabinet or cupboard. Provide variety. Stock
sugar, jams or other sweet foods, cereals, biscuits, meats, vegetables,
fruit and fruit juices. Children will need tinned or powdered milk, and
babies their normal food as far as is possible. Eat perishable items
first. Use your supplies sparingly.
3 Portable Radio and Spare
Batteries
Your radio will be your only link with the outside world. So take a
spare one with you if you can. Keep any aerial pushed in. You will need to
listen for instructions about what to do after the attack and while you
remain in your fall-out room.
4 Tin Opener, Bottle Opener, Cutlery
and Crockery
5 Warm Clothing
And don't forget to take this booklet
with you
These further items will also be useful in the
Fall-out Room: |
6. Bedding,
sleeping bags |
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7. Portable
stove and fuel, saucepans |
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8. Torches
with spare bulbs and batteries, candles, matches |
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9. Table and
chairs |
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10. Toilet
articles soap, toilet rolls, bucket and plastic bags (see
Sanitation) |
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11. Changes of
clothing |
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12. First aid
Kit - with household medicines and prescribed medicines. And at least
aspirins or similar tablets, adhesive dressings, cotton wool, bandages,
disinfectant, ointment, including 'Vaseline' |
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13. Box of dry
sand, cloths or tissues for wiping plates and utensils |
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14. Notebook
and pencils for messages |
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15. Brushes,
shovels and cleaning materials, rubber or plastic gloves, dustpan and
brush |
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16. Toys and
magazines |
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17. Clock
(mechanical) and calendar |
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Sanitation
You will need special sanitation arrangements because there will be no
water to waste in lavatories.
Keep these items in the Fall-out Room:
Containers such as polythene buckets, fitted with covers and -
if possible - improvised seats.
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Polythene
bag linings for emptying the containers. |
Strong
disinfectant and toilet paper. |
Keep these items just outside the Fall-out
Room:
A dustbin
for the temporary storage of sealed bags of waste matter
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A second
dustbin for food remains, empty tins and other rubbish |
If you have only one dustbin, use that for toilet waste
only. Put all other rubbish in plastic bags or paper until you can take it
outside the house.
Limit the Fire
Hazards
As you plan the fall-out room and the inner refuge you need also to
limit as far as you can the dangers from heat and blast to the rest of the
house. Though the heat could not ignite the bricks and stone of your home
it could set alight the contents by striking through unprotected windows.
There are things you can do now to lessen these risks - Remove
anything which may ignite and burn easily (paper and cardboard, for
example) from attic and upper rooms where fire is most likely. Remove
net curtains or thin materials from windows - but leave heavy curtains and
blinds as these can be drawn before an attack as protection against flying
glass. Clear out old newspapers and magazines. Coat windows inside
with diluted emulsion paint of a light colour so that they will reflect
away much of the heat flash, even if the blast which will follow is to
shatter them. If you have a home fire extinguisher - keep it handy.
Keep buckets of water ready on each floor. Remove boxes, firewood
and materials which will burn easily which are close to the outside of the
house. Keep any remaining doors closed to help prevent the spread of
fire. In an attack, damage to gas, oil and electricity systems could
add serious fire and other hazards. All responsible members of your family
should therefore know where and how to turn off gas and electricity at the
mains, all gas pilot lights and oil supplies.
Protect and survive
What you have read so far tells you how to prepare to face a nuclear
explosion. What follows tells you how to use the protection you have
provided.
First - Know the Warning
Sounds:
THE ATTACK WARNING
When an air attack is expected the sirens will sound a rising and
falling note. The warning will also be broadcast on the radio.
THE FALL-OUT
WARNING
 
When there is danger from fall-out you will hear three loud bangs or
three whistles in quick succession.
THE ALL-CLEAR
When the immediate danger from both air attack and fall-out has passed,
the sirens will sound a steady note.
What to do on hearing
an Attack Warning:
At home
If you are at home you should: Send the children to the fall-out
room. Turn off the gas and electricity at the mains; turn off all
pilot lights. Turn off oil supplies. Close stoves, damp down fires.
Shut windows, draw curtains. Go to the fall-out room.
At work or elsewhere
If you can reach home in a couple of minutes try to do so. If your
are at work, or elsewhere, and cannot reach home within a couple of
minutes, take cover where you are or in any nearby building.
In the open
If you are in the open and cannot get home within a couple of minutes,
go immediately to the nearest building. If there is no building nearby and
you cannot reach one within a couple of minutes, use any kind of cover, or
lie flat (in a ditch) and cover the exposed skin of the head and hands.
Light and heat from an explosion will last for up to twenty seconds,
but blast waves may take up to a minute to reach you. If after ten minutes
there has been no blast wave, take cover in the nearest building.
What to do after
the Attack:
After a nuclear attack, there will be a short period before fall-out
starts to descend. Use this time to do essential tasks. This is what you
should do.
Do not
smoke. Check that gas, electricity and other fuel supplies and
all pilot lights are turned off. Go round the house and
put out any small fires using mains water if you can. If
anyone's clothing catches fire, lay them on the floor and roll them in a
blanket, rug or thick coat.
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If the mains water is still available also replenish
water reserves. Then turn off at mains.
Do not
flush lavatories, but store the clean water they contain by taping up the
handles or removing the chains
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If the water supply is interrupted extinguish water
heaters and boilers (including hearth fires with back boilers). Turn off
all taps.
Check that you have got your survival kit at hand for the fall-out
room. (See
the list of survival items.)
If there is structural damage from the attack you may have some time
before a fall-out warning to do minor jobs to keep out the weather using
curtains or sheets to cover broken windows or holes.
If there is time, help neighbours in need, but listen for the fall-out
warning and be ready to return to the fall-out room.
What to do on
hearing the Fall-out Warning:
 
(Remember you may bear a fall-out warning without hearing an
explosion.)
In the open
If you are out of doors, take the nearest and best available cover as
quickly as possible, wiping all the dust you can from your skin and
clothing at the entrance to the building in which you shelter.
At home
All at home must go to the fall-out room and stay inside the inner
refuge, keeping the radio tuned for Government advice and instructions.
Stay in your refuge
The dangers will be so intense that you may all need to stay inside
your inner refuge in the fall-out room for at least forty-eight hours. If
you need to go to the lavatory, or to replenish food or water supplies, do
not stay outside your refuge for a second longer than is necessary.
After forty-eight hours the danger from fall-out will lessen -but you
could still be risking your life by exposure to it. The longer you spend
in your refuge the better. Listen to your radio. DO NOT GO OUTSIDE
until the radio tells you it is safe to do so.
Later on
Visits outside the house may at first be limited to a few minutes for
essential duties. These should be done by people over thirty where
possible. They should avoid bringing dust into the house, keeping separate
stout shoes or boots for outdoors if they can, and always wiping them.
Casualties
You may have casualties from an attack, which you will have to care
for, perhaps for some days, without medical help. Be sure you have your
first aid requirements in your survival kit. (See
the list of survival items.) Listen to your radio for information
about the services and facilities as they become available and about the
type of cases which are to be treated as urgent. If a death occurs
while you are confined to the fall-out room place the body in another room
and cover it as securely as possible. Attach an identification. You
should receive radio instructions on what to do next. If no instructions
have been given within five days, you should temporarily bury the body as
soon as it is safe to go out, and mark the spot.
On hearing the ALL-CLEAR
This means there is no longer an immediate danger from air
attack and fall-out and you may resume normal activities.
Your action check list
Here is a check list, which reminds you of the actions you must take to
provide the protection outlined in this booklet. Use the check list
systematically, ticking off each item as you deal with it. This will help
you to remember all the things you must do. |