Fukushima continues to haunt us

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OVERKILL

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http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/brit...lick=sf_globefb

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Ocean-borne radiation from the 2011 Fukushima nuclear-reactor meltdown in Japan has been detected at the British Columbia shoreline, marking the first time Fukushima contamination has made landfall in North America.

The amounts of radiation detected are low and do not pose a health threat to humans, fish or the environment. But the discovery is part of a pattern that is being closely watched by scientists around the world and has mobilized volunteers helping to track the movement of contaminants on ocean currents.

Previous monitoring by Canadian government agencies had detected air-borne contaminants showing up in B.C. kelp and seawater in the weeks following the nuclear disaster in 2011. And last November, researchers detected radioactivity 150 kilometres offshore of northern California. But no radiation had been found along beaches or shorelines where volunteers had been sampling since 2013.

That has now changed, with the announcement that ocean-borne contamination showed up in a sample collected by a volunteer from a dock in Ucluelet on Feb. 19.

“When I speak to people in public, the primary question they have is about the safety of seafood that comes from the Pacific and from our coastal waters,” Jay Cullen, a chemical oceanographer with the University of Victoria who leads InFORM, a radioactivity monitoring network, said on Monday.

“This project gets directly at those questions by making measurements and quantifying the risk associated with being on or in the water or eating seafood from the Pacific,” he added.

InFORM, founded last year, comprises government, academic and non-governmental organizations and a network of citizen volunteers. Each month, InFORM sends sampling kits to volunteers in about 14 communities along the coast. More than 600 people contacted the network to express interest in being part of the program, Dr. Cullen said.

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, a U.S.-based research partner in InFORM, said on Monday its scientists had detected small amounts of radioactivity in the Ucluelet sample. The sample contained trace amounts of cesium-134 and cesium-137 – two forms of radioactive cesium that do not occur in nature.

Cesium-137 is found in all the world’s oceans as a result of nuclear weapons testing. The substance has a relatively long, 30-year half-life – meaning it takes 30 years for one-half of the cesium-137 in a sample to decay. Cesium-134, however, has a two-year half-life, meaning that if it shows up anywhere in the ocean, it is a recent addition – and the only recent source of Cesium-134 has been Fukushima.

The trace elements were well below internationally established levels of concern for humans and marine life. If someone were to swim for six hours a day every day of the year in water that contained levels of cesium twice as high as the Ucluelet sample, the resulting radiation dose would still be more than 1,000 times less than that of a single dental X-ray, Woods Hole said.

On March 11, 2011, a 9.0-magnitude earthquake and resulting tsunami led to meltdowns in three of six reactors at the Fukushima nuclear power plant. The disaster sent radioactive material into the air and into the Pacific Ocean. Models predict contaminated seawater will reach Canadian waters, posing potential environmental and public-health concerns on Canada’s West and Arctic coasts, InFORM says.

The impact in Canada is expected to be small, but researchers say they need more information to quantify the risks. Models suggest contamination should peak this year or early next before beginning to taper off, Dr. Cullen said.

InFORM has obtained three years’ of funding – $630,000 – from the Marine Environmental Observation Prediction and Response Network, a research team hosted by Nova Scotia’s Dalhousie University.
 
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We should be more worried/concerned about all the plastic in the oceans especially the Pacific that is primarily coming from Asia ie; China.
 
The solution to pollution is dilution. The ocean is a big place, and the chances of anything washing up on this shore that will have any impact are pretty much negligible.
 
Meh, they will just have the fda "raise the bar" again and the acceptable limits will behigher and every one will be happy. Global levels are hhigher by an ugly amount in the past 60 years. Appears the biggest radioactive waste land is just up the river from me. Hanford supposedly has more waste than the rest of the world. All for twonukes lol.
Oh well, life goes on until it doesn't.
 
Dyusik..very correct. Radioactive emissions from Fukushima are ongoing and unprecedented in severity. The situation has been out of control since days after the tsunami and subsequent explosions knocked out the power (and cooling systems)in 2011...we just stopped hearing about it. Radioactive material in the environment doesn't "go away"...much of it will be with us for a very long time (thousands or millions of years depending...). Long story short look for increased illness and cancer rates for those exposed. Thank goodness we have Dancing With The Stars and the latest smart phone device to distract us from what's really going on in the world...
 
Originally Posted By: oilmaven
Long story short look for increased illness and cancer rates for those exposed. Thank goodness we have Dancing With The Stars and the latest smart phone device to distract us from what's really going on in the world...


Have a crack at reading the link that I posted earlier.
 
How is anyone still alive in Japan? If dangerous stuff is reaching us,think about the people only hundreds of miles away.Toyota city should be a ghost town now.
 
NHGUY,
ZLT (Zero Linear Threshold), when you "follow the money" is driven by people producing better and better instruments, trying to scare more and more people into buying them.
 
Originally Posted By: OVERKILL

The amounts of radiation detected are low and do not pose a health threat to humans, fish or the environment.


MEANWHILE, according to the CDC:

Worldwide, tobacco use causes more than 5 million deaths per year, and current trends show that tobacco use will cause more than 8 million deaths annually by 2030

Yet its a "legal" substance that no one notices or cares about.
 
Originally Posted By: gathermewool
The solution to pollution is dilution. The ocean is a big place, and the chances of anything washing up on this shore that will have any impact are pretty much negligible.

You are correct. It sounds evil but in the grand scheme of things, the impact would be nill.

Originally Posted By: Dyusik
Meh, they will just have the fda "raise the bar" again and the acceptable limits will behigher and every one will be happy. Global levels are hhigher by an ugly amount in the past 60 years. Appears the biggest radioactive waste land is just up the river from me. Hanford supposedly has more waste than the rest of the world. All for twonukes lol.
Oh well, life goes on until it doesn't.

When have the limits been raised? And which limits are you referring to? Global levels are probably the same as they were a long time ago.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Background_radiation

Burning of coal is the largest man made contributor.
 
Originally Posted By: NHGUY
How is anyone still alive in Japan? If dangerous stuff is reaching us,think about the people only hundreds of miles away.Toyota city should be a ghost town now.



As I understand it, the contaminated waste water is leaking into the ground and out into the ocean where currents take it away. So it's not backing up into the land/island much. That's not to say that they don't have ground contamination, or that some water isn't seeping back into the island. Just that that majority of it is being taken out into the ocean.

Though I'm no expert, so I could be entirely mistaken.
 
Originally Posted By: sicko
Originally Posted By: NHGUY
How is anyone still alive in Japan? If dangerous stuff is reaching us,think about the people only hundreds of miles away.Toyota city should be a ghost town now.



As I understand it, the contaminated waste water is leaking into the ground and out into the ocean where currents take it away. So it's not backing up into the land/island much. That's not to say that they don't have ground contamination, or that some water isn't seeping back into the island. Just that that majority of it is being taken out into the ocean.

Though I'm no expert, so I could be entirely mistaken.


I think what a lot of it comes down to is: people don't understand how big the world really is.

We have the Adirondacks pretty much regulated out of enjoyment. Because people in NYC don't understand just how big the Adirondack park is.
 
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