HOW TO NAVIGATE THIS SITE
Resources
There are four basic categories of pages on this web site: Events,
People, Places,
and Science and Technology. These are
further divided into sub-categories, each with its own introduction.
Categories and sub-categories can be accessed by clicking on a button to your
left. If you would like to begin with a
quick survey of the Manhattan Project, try reading (in order) the
eight Event sub-category pages, beginning with "Atomic
Discoveries, 1890s-1939." For thematic lists of pages drawn
from all four main categories, see the "Special
Topics," and under "Resources"
you will find a collection of supporting material.
When completed, The Manhattan
Project: An Interactive History will total some 120,000 words and over 200
pages and 500 images, including photographs, maps, and drawings. The site
is being implemented incrementally, with the "Events of the Manhattan
Project" and "Resources Relating to the Manhattan Project"
sections the first part to go online. Click on the Events
or Resources buttons to the left, or
visit the Site
Map, for a
listing of currently available pages.
This web site is best viewed with Internet Explorer. Bulleted lists
sometimes are displayed with extraneous blank lines when viewed with some versions of Netscape
Navigator. Whenever you see text that is underlined and in bold, such
as this, it is a link that points to another page on
this web site. Normally a term is made into a link only the first time it
is mentioned on each page. Whenever you see text that is underlined but not in bold, such
as this, it is a link to a web page external to this web site. (This usually only occurs in the "Suggested Readings" or "Sources
and Notes" for each entry.) Text that is in bold but not underlined,
such as this, is a link to a page that is not yet available.
To learn more about any particular photograph,
simply move the cursor over the image and leave it there for a moment (a
caption will appear). Source information for photographs and other images is in the
"Sources and Notes" for each entry. Click on any
photograph to view a
larger version of it (if one is available). Some photographs
have their own web pages with further background information; a list of
these "photograph pages" is available in the "Photo
Gallery.
Click
here to view sources and notes for this page.