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In reply to the discussion: Fukushima radioactive waters to hit US any day now [View all]muriel_volestrangler
(104,199 posts)44. You haven't responded to #31
where I put up what Woods Hole, the institution you pointed out had done some measurements, said. Was that not educational for you? Here's some more from them:
Will radiation be of concern along U.S. and Canadian coasts?
Levels of any Fukushima contaminants in the ocean will be many thousands of times lower after they mix across the Pacific and arrive on the West Coast of North America some time in late 2013 or 2014. This is not to say that we should not be concerned about additional sources of radioactivity in the ocean above the natural sources, but at the levels expected even short distances from Japan, the Pacific will be safe for boating, swimming, etc.
Is debris washing ashore on the US/Canadian West Coast of concern?
Debris washed out to sea by the tsunami does not carry Fukushima radioactive contaminationIve measured several samples in my lab. It does, however, carry invasive species, which will be of serious concern to coastal ecosystems on the West Coast.
http://www.whoi.edu/page.do?pid=83397&tid=3622&cid=94989
Levels of any Fukushima contaminants in the ocean will be many thousands of times lower after they mix across the Pacific and arrive on the West Coast of North America some time in late 2013 or 2014. This is not to say that we should not be concerned about additional sources of radioactivity in the ocean above the natural sources, but at the levels expected even short distances from Japan, the Pacific will be safe for boating, swimming, etc.
Is debris washing ashore on the US/Canadian West Coast of concern?
Debris washed out to sea by the tsunami does not carry Fukushima radioactive contaminationIve measured several samples in my lab. It does, however, carry invasive species, which will be of serious concern to coastal ecosystems on the West Coast.
http://www.whoi.edu/page.do?pid=83397&tid=3622&cid=94989
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I noticed you skipped an important part of the 1st sentence: But is likely to be harmless
uppityperson
Oct 2013
#2
Can't do scaremongering and say "likely to be harmless" at the same time...nt
SidDithers
Oct 2013
#3
Not attacking you, just trying to figure out what you mean. Your linked article says "harmless" and
uppityperson
Oct 2013
#9
Hello. Would you please answer, seeking clarification here. I won't insult or attack, just
uppityperson
Oct 2013
#18
"He is so over-the-top about it that he has been banned from the Environment and Energy group."
zappaman
Oct 2013
#24
Not all ionizing radiation is the same. Alpha and beta particles are easily shielded against.
Gravitycollapse
Oct 2013
#13
What I've read about the sea stars is local overpopulation leading to fast disease transmission,
uppityperson
Oct 2013
#53
If you want some 'science': debris floats, so part of it is above the surface
muriel_volestrangler
Oct 2013
#71
Maybe the starfish deaths along the Northwest coast are related to it?
Baitball Blogger
Oct 2013
#43