Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 86. Chapters: Australian nuclear test sites, British anti-nuclear power activists, British nuclear physicists, British nuclear test sites, Nuclear energy in the United Kingdom, Nuclear history of the United Kingdom, Ernest Rutherford, Malden Island, Kiritimati, Klaus Fuchs, Advanced gas-cooled reactor, Polaris Sales Agreement, James Chadwick, Nuclear weapons and the United Kingdom, Nuclear power in the United Kingdom, Magnox, British nuclear tests at Maralinga, Tube Alloys, William Penney, Baron Penney, Operation Grapple, Anti-nuclear movement in the United Kingdom, Derek Robinson, BNFL, Otto Robert Frisch, Tizard Mission, MAUD Committee, Nassau Agreement, John Cockcroft, 1958 US-UK Mutual Defence Agreement, John Clive Ward, Ernest C. Pollard, Civil Nuclear Constabulary, National Nuclear Laboratory, Lorna Arnold, Thermal Oxide Reprocessing Plant, Alan Nunn May, Atomic Energy Research Establishment, Margaret Gowing, George Paget Thomson, Urenco Group, Montebello Islands, Maralinga, South Australia, James L. Tuck, Patricia Lewis, Quebec Agreement, Project E, Andrew Brown, Michael Perrin, John Holt, J. M. Robson, Nuclear Liabilities Fund, Frisch-Peierls memorandum, HANDEL, Russell Stannard, Ernest Marsden, George Bacon, Office for Nuclear Regulation, Christopher Llewellyn Smith, Low Level Waste Repository, Albert Bore, Sellafield Ltd, Emu Field, Ronald Wilfried Gurney, John Adams, Denys Wilkinson, Square Leg, David Lowry, Kenneth Allen, Gen 75 Committee, Ray Mackintosh, Winfrith, Nuclear weapons tests in Australia, Rolls-Royce Marine Power Operations, B205, Scottish Nuclear, Gemma D'Arcy, PLUTO reactor, Richard Clegg, Tier 1 - UK Nuclear Site Management & Licensing. Excerpt: The United Kingdom was the third country to test an independently developed nuclear weapon, in October 1952. It is one of the five "Nuclear Weapons States" (NWS...