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Salto di Quirra

Coordinates: 39°31′38″N 9°37′58″E / 39.52722°N 9.63278°E / 39.52722; 9.63278
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Poligono sperimentale e di addestramento interforze Salto di Quirra
Near Perdasdefogu, Sardinia in Italy
File:Quirrasign.jpg
A sign indicating that vehicles are entering the Restricted Test Range.
File:Quirrarange.jpg
Area currently covered by the Salto di Quirra Range
Coordinates39°31'38"N 9°37'58" E
TypeAerospace (military/civil)
Site information
OperatorItalian Air Force
StatusActive
Site history
In use1956–present
Test information
Other testsMissiles, aircraft weapons, drone aircraft, rockets

Salto di Quirra is a restricted weapons testing range and rocket launching site near Perdasdefogu on Sardinia.
It is the biggest military range within the European Union [1], composed of 12000 hectares of land owned by the italian Ministry of Defence.
Sardinia hosts the 60% of italian military bases, and together with Friuli-Venezia Giulia is one of the most militarized regions of Italy.

Salto di Quirra primarily launches military rockets, but civilian rockets, such as the Skylark, have occasionally been launched for the study of the upper atmosphere.

The Salto di Quirra range is located close to the town of Perdasdefogu in a mountainous zone at the south-east of Sardinia. It is an inter-arm range, currently placed under the authority of the Italian Air Force. Its main activity deals with the tests of various types of tactical missiles used or built by Italy, or in collaboration.

This base was used, at the beginning of the 1960s, for the first sounding rockets launches carried out by the CRA (Centro Ricerche Aerospaziali) in co-operation with the Italian Air Force and NASA Three campaigns of Nike Asp and Nike Cajun launches took place, in 1961 and 1963.

From 1964 and until 1972, it was used for the ESRO sounding rockets program using especially Skylark and Centaure rockets, but also Belier and Zenit During this period, some sounding rockets were also launched on behalf of Switzerland and Germany.

After 1972, the Salto di Quirra activities in the field of rocketry were limited to national programs. Three Alfa experimental vehicles were launched successfully in 1973-75. A test of San Marco Scout rocket, in 1992, was less successful.

Vega test firings

Zefiro 9

Two test firings of the Zefiro 9 rocket engine, designed to power the third stage of the Vega launch vehicle, have been conducted at Salto di Quirra. The first test firing took place 20 December 2005 and was a complete success.[2] The second firing, on 28 March 2007, experienced unexpected anomalous behavior.[3]

Space and missiles operations

From its very first start, the Salto di Quirra (Sardinia) firing range played a relevant role in Italian space operations. The range belonged to the ITAF Ammunition Research Unit, since 1956 headed by Luigi Broglio whose name had been put forward by Gen. Mario Pezzi. In 1959, the Italian National Research Council (CNR) and ITAF started a research program in the outer atmosphere using rocket-carried probes. In 1961, together with NASA, CNR planned a series of weather experiments releasing clouds of litho-sodium carried in the atmosphere by USA-built Nike-Cajun missiles launched from the Wallops Islands Base (Va) and Salto di Quirra (Italy) range. High altitude atmospheric streams could be measured quite accurately observing contemporarily the litho-sodium clouds from seven ground-stations in Italy (five in Sardinia and one each at Furbara base and Borgo Piave observation post).

The first launch of the series took place on January 12, 1961. A two-stage Nike-Cajun missile released 20 kg of sodium and lithium dust at an altitude of 90 km (270 000 ft). Six launches altogether were accomplished successfully. Broglio and his team set even a record, a triple launch within 24 hours, starting on the morning of January 19 and ending up the evening of the day after. Thanks to media reporting, the world at large was informed of Italian space research activities and that is was operating a missile launching pad. After this exploit, the Salto di Quirra base was involved in many research programs particularly in the European Space Research Organization (ESRO) framework. In 1962 ESRO planned a series of eight launches to study the outer atmosphere and the ionosphere. These experiments were to be fundamental to build the European Space Agency in the following years: British-built Skylark and French-built Centaure missiles were used for the tests. The high level of both personnel and facilities at Salto di Quirra made it the favourite launching base of ESRO until 1972, following an agreement signed in Paris in 1967 by ESRO's CEO, Pierre Auger. In 1985 the Avio Company built a vertical structure in Salto di Quirra to test the engines of the European vectors Ariane 3 and Ariane 4 and the Zefiro vector, from its prototype Zefiro 16 to Zefiro 9 down to number 23 in the series. At Salto di Quirra the second and third stages of Vega were tested thoroughly, the Vega being a new European vector developed and built mostly by Italian firms.

Syndrome Quirra

The so-called "syndrome Quirra", is a disease that hit militaries and civilians living around and inside the military area of Quirra, it is very similar to Balkan syndrome and the Gulf War syndrome. Diagnosis: cancer deaths, probably generated by the "dust of war", the residues that remain in the air, soil and water after the explosion of artillery shells containing uranium, often "depleted uranium". A triggering the investigation, and seizure of equipment, a health complaint: 65% of the civilians who live around the area is suffering from leukemia.[4][5][6][7]

References

39°31′38″N 9°37′58″E / 39.52722°N 9.63278°E / 39.52722; 9.63278