On the question of a rebound, not as much as you think. Industrialism has reached its endpoint and we will return to the way things were before all this coal and oil. Rome did quite well and so did many other civilizations prior to the modern industrial era.
On the use of uranium, that is truly a pandora's box of woe. I was engaged in a discussion on a somewhat related topic regarding the use of depleted uranium as ammunition in Iraq War I & II. Depleted uranium is the waste leftover from the purification process to get the good stuff used in the nuclear rods.
Anyway, part of the DU discussion can be found here:
http://www.soldierforum.org/forum/viewt ... =1507#1507
Another discussion on DU is here:
http://www.soldierforum.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=416
It is true that substances like dioxin, PCBs, and other fat-soluble toxic pesticides and the like are very hard to get rid of once it's in the food chain (and it always ends up in the food chain being organo-philic), it is at least tolerable in the human body, though much less so in other creatures. This makes the presence of such substances at least tolerable because death is not inevitable just because you have it in your body. It is stored in the liver and the fat and is thus sequestered from normal body functioning, although if any of it is mobilized out of the fat it will act as a hormone mimicker and can cause sexual organ cancers or fetal problems in pregnant women. But these are not inevitable simply because you have any of these substances in your body.
However, radiation poisoning is not survivable let alone tolerable. If what is happening to our soldiers and the people of Iraq are any indication, once this stuff hits the water supply, what little potable water we have left will be more or less permanently contaminated with radioactive particles that will bring on an epidemic of cancers like the Black Death plagues of Europe.
The only true answer to what we face is to learn to live within the earth's limits and to re-prioritize our values from a materialistic to a more aesthetic, social, and spiritual view of our existence. To me, this is where the real shock awaits when the materialism of Western civilization must confront its own greed.
Lastly, I don't like the way we live. It is wholly unnatural and the breakdown of society is evidence of this folly. We must return to communal agrarianism and learn to value and respect what the earth provides for our needs in food and water all by itself. Horses, oxen, and water buffalo are naturally solar powered (they eat plants which grow because of chlorophyll and sunlight) with the added benefit of pooping out natural fertilizers. All this labor saving industrialism and cheap oil is but a blip in the history of humankind. Unfortunately, its effects are going to be extremely far reaching for a great many generations to come, if we live that long.
I suggest reading E.F. Schumacher's "Small is Beautiful: Economics as if People Mattered" for a real understanding of what we face and the choices we will have to make. I also suggest Wendell Berry's "Another Turn of the Crank" in addition to his "The Unsettling of America: Culture and Agriculture."