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Fukushima radiation has reached North American shores
by The Extinction Protocol
https://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com/2015/04/07/fukushima-radiation-has-reached-north-american-shores/

April 2015 – ENVIRONMENT - Seaborne
radiation from Japan's Fukushima nuclear disaster has reached North
America. Scientists at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution detected
small amounts of cesium-134 and cesium-137 in a sample of seawater
taken in February from a dock on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
It's the first time radioactivity from the March 2011 triple meltdown
has been identified on West Coast shores. Woods Hole chemical
oceanographer Ken Buesseler emphasized that the radiation is at very low
levels that aren't expected to harm human health or the environment.
“Even if the levels were twice as high, you could still swim in the
ocean for six hours every day for a year and receive a dose more than a
thousand times less than a single dental X-ray,” Buesseler said. “While
that's not zero, that's a very low risk.” Massive amounts of
contaminated water were released from the crippled nuclear plant
following a 9.0 magnitude earthquake and tsunami. More radiation was
released to the air, then fell to the sea.
Frustrated by the absence of
monitoring by U.S. federal agencies, Buesseler last year launched a
crowd-funded, citizen-science seawater sampling project. He's tracked
the radiation plume across 5,000 miles of the Pacific Ocean, using
highly sensitive, expensive equipment at his Cape Cod, Massachusetts,
laboratory. There, he analyzes samples sent to him by West Coast
volunteers and scientists aboard research cruises. In October, he
reported that a sample taken about 745 miles west of Vancouver, British
Columbia, tested positive for cesium-134, the so-called fingerprint of
Fukushima because it can only have come from that plant. It also showed
higher-than-background levels of cesium-137, another Fukushima isotope
that already is present in the world's oceans because of nuclear testing
in the 1950s and 1960s. In November, Buesseler reported that Fukushima
radiation had been identified in 10 offshore samples, including one 100
miles off the coast of Eureka, California. The Vancouver Island sample
was taken Feb. 19 from a dock in Ucluelet, a working harbor community in
Pacific Rim National Park Reserve.
It
contained 1.5 becquerels per cubic meter (Bq/m3) of cesium-134, the
Fukushima fingerprint, and 5 Bq/m3 of cesium-137. A becquerel is a basic
unit of radioactivity. That compares to 50 million Bq/m3 of the
isotopes near Japan just after the meltdown and about 1,000 Bq/m3 near
Japan now, Buesseler said. Scientific models have predicted that in
general, the plume would hit the shore in the north first, then head
south toward California. – Statesman Journal (excerpt)
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