Mururoa, atoll at the southeastern tip of the Tuamotu Archipelago, French Polynesia, in the central South Pacific Ocean, about 700 miles (1,125 km) southeast of Tahiti. Uninhabited and used for growing coconuts before its cession to France in 1964, the island was from 1966 to 1996 the site of a number of French nuclear weapons tests conducted through the Pacific Experimentation Centre. The first such explosion took place July 3, 1966; after 1975 the tests were conducted underground. France, responding to international concern over fracturing the rock of Mururoa, began to carry out its more powerful blasts under the lagoon of Fangataufa Atoll, south of Mururoa. Testing was suspended in 1992 but resumed in 1995, when, amid widespread opposition from the French public and within the territory itself, France exploded a bomb under Mururoa. The test was followed by rioting in Tahiti and pressure from a mounting antinuclear movement. The last French nuclear test in the South Pacific took place below Fangataufa Atoll in January 1996.
In 1996 France signed the protocols of the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty (Treaty of Rarotonga). Military and civilian facilities related to the nuclear testing were dismantled, and Mururoa and Fangataufa atolls were returned to something approaching their natural state. A handful of military personnel remained in the area to provide periodic surveillance of the test sites.