Three Mile Island nuclear plant, site of 1979 partial meltdown, to close

The plant will close in two years, according to the owner.

Chicago-based Exelon issued a press release announcing the planned shuttering of the plant, near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

The accident occurred less than two weeks after the release of a Hollywood thriller, "The China Syndrome," about a fictional meltdown at a nuclear reactor.

William Whittock, a Harrisburg resident, told ABC News in a 1979 broadcast that a "geyser of steam" erupted from the top of the plant.

"I heard a very loud noise that sounded like a huge release of steam," Whittock said at the time. "I looked out the window, and it was dark, but you could see from the lights that there was a geyser of steam rising up in the air."

Workers were evacuated from the plant and then "checked and rechecked" for radiation contamination, ABC News reported at the time.

A cleanup after the accident took 14 years, according to a 1993 report in The New York Times.

The reactor damaged in the accident has been closed since then, but the other reactor is still in use.