I believe everything here, and whom is to not believe another earthquake could happen on that spot again....
Lucky I gave up Turkish apricots in 1985!! But I love Japanese tea and seafood etc, or I did till today....
Live life love people try to help the next generation(s)!!
Did some googling....
When the monsoon season began in June 2011, a light fabric cover was used to protect the damaged reactor buildings from storms and heavy rainfall. On 1 August 2011, TEPCO said that very high radiation levels were found outside the building of reactor 1 and 2 from an exhaust-pipe. On 16 August, TEPCO announced the installation of devices in the spent fuel pools of reactor 2, 3 and 4, which used special membranes and electricity to desalinate the water. These pools were cooled with seawater for some time, and TEPCO feared the salt would corrode stainless steel pipes and the pool walls. Burying the reactors in sand and concrete is considered to be a last resort.
I vote a 100 foot high, 10 mile wide concrete pour!! - Skinny 5-21-2012 1:53 am [add a comment]
Of the 440,350 wild boar killed in the 2010 hunting season in Germany, over 1,000 were found to be contaminated with levels of radiation above the permitted limit of 600 bequerels, due to residual radioactivity from Chernobyl. Germany has "banned wild game meat because of contamination linked to radioactive mushrooms". - Skinny 5-21-2012 2:21 am [add a comment]
The Norwegian Agricultural Authority reported that in 2009 a total of 18,000 livestock in Norway needed to be given uncontaminated feed for a period of time before slaughter in order to ensure that their meat was safe for human consumption. This was due to residual radioactivity from Chernobyl in the plants they graze on in the wild during the summer. The after-effects of Chernobyl were expected to be seen for a further 100 years - Skinny 5-21-2012 2:23 am [add a comment]
Fukushima - Chernobyl of the sea. - steve 5-21-2012 4:39 am [add a comment]
you know the giant one earth mushroom mckenna stuff, well radioactive mushrooms - Skinny 5-21-2012 5:35 am [add a comment]
2012! Is this it, the end of our civilization? - sarah 5-21-2012 6:12 pm [add a comment]
well, that's lively news for monday morning. i wonder what she eats? maybe it's best we all die off. start fresh in 17 million years after the radiation is gone. - linda 5-21-2012 7:19 pm [add a comment]
nothing Japanese will pass my lips again......
sad, its the end of an era in dining for me...
working on my radioactive food balance program, will post soon...
- Skinny 5-29-2012 4:34 am [add a comment]
- steve 5-19-2012 4:55 am
I believe everything here, and whom is to not believe another earthquake could happen on that spot again....
Lucky I gave up Turkish apricots in 1985!!
But I love Japanese tea and seafood etc, or I did till today....
Live life love people try to help the next generation(s)!!
Did some googling....
When the monsoon season began in June 2011, a light fabric cover was used to protect the damaged reactor buildings from storms and heavy rainfall. On 1 August 2011, TEPCO said that very high radiation levels were found outside the building of reactor 1 and 2 from an exhaust-pipe. On 16 August, TEPCO announced the installation of devices in the spent fuel pools of reactor 2, 3 and 4, which used special membranes and electricity to desalinate the water. These pools were cooled with seawater for some time, and TEPCO feared the salt would corrode stainless steel pipes and the pool walls. Burying the reactors in sand and concrete is considered to be a last resort.
I vote a 100 foot high, 10 mile wide concrete pour!!
- Skinny 5-21-2012 1:53 am [add a comment]
Of the 440,350 wild boar killed in the 2010 hunting season in Germany, over 1,000 were found to be contaminated with levels of radiation above the permitted limit of 600 bequerels, due to residual radioactivity from Chernobyl. Germany has "banned wild game meat because of contamination linked to radioactive mushrooms".
- Skinny 5-21-2012 2:21 am [add a comment]
The Norwegian Agricultural Authority reported that in 2009 a total of 18,000 livestock in Norway needed to be given uncontaminated feed for a period of time before slaughter in order to ensure that their meat was safe for human consumption. This was due to residual radioactivity from Chernobyl in the plants they graze on in the wild during the summer. The after-effects of Chernobyl were expected to be seen for a further 100 years
- Skinny 5-21-2012 2:23 am [add a comment]
Fukushima - Chernobyl of the sea.
- steve 5-21-2012 4:39 am [add a comment]
you know the giant one earth mushroom mckenna stuff, well radioactive mushrooms
- Skinny 5-21-2012 5:35 am [add a comment]
2012! Is this it, the end of our civilization?
- sarah 5-21-2012 6:12 pm [add a comment]
well, that's lively news for monday morning. i wonder what she eats? maybe it's best we all die off. start fresh in 17 million years after the radiation is gone.
- linda 5-21-2012 7:19 pm [add a comment]
radioactive fish are here
- linda 5-29-2012 1:35 am [add a comment]
nothing Japanese will pass my lips again...... sad, its the end of an era in dining for me... working on my radioactive food balance program, will post soon...
- Skinny 5-29-2012 4:34 am [add a comment]
AP link
- steve 5-29-2012 5:46 am [add a comment]
Kelp is a primary source of iodine, which protects the thyroid from exposure to radiatio...er, never mind...
- steve 5-29-2012 5:49 am [add a comment]
eat african kelp
- Skinny 5-29-2012 3:49 pm [add a comment]
Where do you get that?
- steve 5-29-2012 4:05 pm [add a comment]
tablets for sale online
- steve 5-29-2012 4:07 pm [add a comment]
where??
- Skinny 5-29-2012 7:38 pm [add a comment]
- steve 5-29-2012 4:05 pm [add a comment]
oh man. That video is brutal.
- sally mckay 5-29-2012 5:51 pm [add a comment]
sad....
- Skinny 5-29-2012 8:02 pm [add a comment]
Be well Iaka.
- steve 5-30-2012 12:29 am [add a comment]