Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on April 6, 2015

Bookmark and Share

Fukushima radiation reaches N American shores

Fukushima radiation reaches N American shores thumbnail

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.

“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.

That may be difficult to document, however, because Buesseler’s sampling is not regular or systematic and depends on volunteer fundraising.

In Oregon, particularly, there have been only four sampling sites, and only one still is active.

And ocean currents can be unpredictable.

“We expect more of the sites will show detectable levels of cesium-134 in coming months, but ocean currents and exchange between offshore and coastal waters is quite complex,” Buesseler said. “Predicting the spread of radiation becomes more complex the closer it gets to the coast, and we need the public’s help to continue this sampling network.”

Buesseler’s group has recently teamed with a similar, Canadian-funded program called InFORM, led by Jay Cullen at the University of Victoria, Canada. It will add about a dozen monitoring stations along the coast of British Columbia.

Cruises with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California, will add about 10 new sampling sites offshore.

And Woods Hole has received support from the National Science Foundation to analyze about 250 seawater samples that will be collected next month on a research ship traveling between Hawaii and the Aleutian Islands in Alaska.

statesman journal



13 Comments on "Fukushima radiation reaches N American shores"

  1. Makati1 on Mon, 6th Apr 2015 8:01 pm 

    How much is too much? I think we are going to find out. Or I should say, our kids and grand kids and theirs. How much poison can you ingest before it kills you? We are in a huge world wide experiment without controls.

  2. welch on Mon, 6th Apr 2015 8:43 pm 

    They’re still using that rediculous graphic. Enough already.

  3. SilentRunning on Mon, 6th Apr 2015 9:13 pm 

    Makati1 wrote:

    >How much is too much? I think we are going to find out. Or I should say, our kids and grand kids and theirs. How much poison can you ingest before it kills you? We are in a huge world wide experiment without controls.

    Every time you eat a banana or a potato, you’re getting more radiation than drinking a whole cubic meter (264 gallons!) of the ocean water they measured!!

  4. SilentRunning on Mon, 6th Apr 2015 9:17 pm 

    >They’re still using that rediculous graphic. Enough already.

    I agree. If that graphic were even remotely correct, then well over half the USA died back in 2011. Japan would would be completely depopulated – a lifeless moonscape.

  5. SilentRunning on Mon, 6th Apr 2015 10:41 pm 

    For a point of comparison folks – the *natural* radiation in a cubic meter of seawater is on the order of 10,000 bq in that same cubic meter of water. The only reason that we can measure the Cs-134 & Cs-137 in the presence of that background radiation is because they emit different wavelength gamma rays.

  6. Makati1 on Mon, 6th Apr 2015 11:18 pm 

    Silent, prove your assertions with references that are not paid for by Monsanto, Dow, GE or their cousins.

    I don’t drink salt water, but I do eat the things that live in it. So, the tiny krill eat thousands of plankton that have a microscopic bit of radiation in each, then they are eaten by the thousands by a larger fish that is then eaten by the hundreds by a larger fish that is… The final stage eventually is on your table as a tuna, halibut, salmon, etc. dinner.

    Tell me how that is different than the series of centrifuges that concentrate uranium for fuel or bombs. How many million krill does it take to make a tuna die or just get cancer?

    I suspect that you are in the nuclear industry someplace and your career/paycheck determines your thoughts.

  7. Speculawyer on Mon, 6th Apr 2015 11:26 pm 

    Fukushima definitely has been a disaster . . . . but this extremely low radiation water hitting the west coast is nothing to worry about. It certainly won’t stop me from enjoying the beach & ocean.

  8. paulo1 on Tue, 7th Apr 2015 8:18 am 

    Fearmongering at its best and worst. I am looking forward to fresh salmon.

  9. Kenz300 on Tue, 7th Apr 2015 9:09 am 

    The cost to clean up and store the nuclear waste at Chernobyl and Fukishima is enormous. Those disasters continue today with no end in sight. The technology to clean up the sites does not exist.

    Chernobyl’s new shell – YouTube

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJSpDAwEtjA&spfreload=10

  10. Dredd on Tue, 7th Apr 2015 11:24 am 

    “Scientists … detected small amounts … from a dock on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.”

    Docks in ports and harbors are in the “gun sights” of the assassin AGW SLR (New Climate Catastrophe Policy: Triage – 12).

    Underestimating is erring on the side of disaster, rather than on the side of caution.

  11. Apneaman on Tue, 7th Apr 2015 4:15 pm 

    Troubled waters: Nuclear radiation found in B.C. may pose health concerns

    Discovery of Fukushima radioactivity raises concerns for local marine life, and the effect it may have on humans

    http://www.vancouversun.com/technology/Troubled+waters+Nuclear+radiation+found+pose+health+concerns/9606269/story.html

  12. Apneaman on Tue, 7th Apr 2015 4:31 pm 

    “The Chief Of The Fukushima Nuclear Power Station Has Admitted That The Technology Needed To Decommission Three Melted-Down Reactors Does Not Exist, And He Has No Idea How It Will Be Developed”

    http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2015/04/chief-fukushima-nuclear-power-station-admitted-technology-needed-decommission-three-melted-reactors-exist-idea-will-developed.html

  13. Apneaman on Tue, 7th Apr 2015 4:38 pm 

    Catastrophic Sea Level Rise within Three Generations

    “Most nuclear plants are located along waterways for easy access to water for coolant purposes, making them vulnerable to storm surge flooding in a world of expanding oceans. Since decommissioning a nuclear power station is a long, expensive, and dangerous process, I can’t imagine we will have the time, money, or forethought to safely get rid of all these time bombs before most of them are swallowed up by the ocean and go Fukushima on the world.”

    http://collapseofindustrialcivilization.com/2015/04/07/exponential-sea-level-rise-within-three-generations/#comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *