I posted this screenshot of predicted radiation from Fukushima irradiated water earlier in the month. At the time, I wrote:
It isn’t clear from ASR’s published material whether or not this model is influenced by the continuing entry of radioactive water into the ocean. It is fairly certain that Tepco and other monitoring agencies do not have anything that could be described as a clear idea as to how much radioactive water has gotten into circulation in the North Pacific, or how much water is continuing to make its way there.
The issues I raised then had to do with irradiated water from the meltdowns that is making its way into North Pacific circulation patterns.
The issue raised about the results of these measurements taken in the North Central Pacific last summer appears to be different:
The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster is far from over, as new reports explains that water samples taken nearly 400 miles off the coast of Japan in the Pacific Ocean are showing radiation levels of up to 1,000 times higher than previous readings. Presenting their findings at the recent Ocean Sciences Meeting in Salt Lake City, Ut., scientists continued to claim these severely elevated radiation levels are not a significant health or environmental threat.
Back in June 2011, a ship carrying scientists traveled off the eastern coast of Japan collecting water samples at distances of roughly 20 miles to 400 miles from the coast. Upon analysis, these samples were found to contain elevated levels of cesium-137 at ten to 1,000 times higher than levels detected before the Fukushima disaster, which is highly alarming.
Included in the detections was the presence of radioactive silver, which is an obvious product of melted control rods at the nuclear facility. The mainstream media is claiming that this silver is simply a result of nuclear fission, but the reality of the situation is that this silver is evidence of a complete core meltdown at the facility, which is obviously having widespread repercussions.
I’ll speculate that the “presence of radioactive silver” in the findings is the result of airborne debris from one of the hydrogen-induced reactor explosions last spring.
It is somewhat reassuring that there are indeed research ships containing scientists in the Northwest Pacific, “collecting water samples.” It is distinctively less reassuring, that at the conference where these findings were announced, they were minimized:
Meanwhile, Hartmut Nies, an official from the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), insists that all this radiation is not that big of a deal. He even went so far at the recent meeting to claim that “if it was not seawater, you could drink it without any problems,” a completely absurd position that has no grounding in science.
As part of their misinformation campaign, IAEA officials and others compared the radioactive cesium and silver to the naturally-occurring, elemental potassium-40 found in seawater. This natural potassium, of course, is much different than the radioactive elements being emitted from Fukushima, as sea creatures have developed a natural tolerance for potassium-40.
Even those falsely claiming that all this radiation is completely harmless to humans are at least admitting that the findings are indicative that the Fukushima nuclear facility is still leaking radiation into the environment.




7 Comments

This needs to be front paged.
Thank you for reporting on this, Edward. Have there been any tests of sea life in the area for contamination? Will there be? And how many samples were taken? It all sounds a little vague, perhaps deliberately so. Oh dear, another worry for the world that this seems to be ongoing.
Recommended.
So the post-ElBaradei IAEA can’t find a problem with the real and spreading increased radiation levels in the Pacific for over a year after the disaster… but the corporately-remodeled agency can locate and identify a non-existent bomb in Iran in under a microsecond.
The IAEA has never been good on investigating reactor accidents
Hi Dr. Teller, I like what you are putting up there with the Nuclear reactor accident.
Of course it was only a matter of time, when… and there have already been numorous failures… but where are we here?
to make my point, let me say that… it is stupid… it is evil… it is evil, yeah, that is the word, because if you can deduce that what will be the end result of taking the elements that… (you have to go into a kind of pensive state now… see deeply now… see this point that I make even in your semi conscious state…. what I am saying is… the evil that is one halve of the f’n universe…. pause. That evil… perhaps the material aspect of things… verses
that’s my case for the moment sir, and maddam
Now it has been realized retro, that I should a done better on that , but no I am not talking to general low bell curve types, Not that I is one so high, cause I ain’t.
like my recently deceased mommy said to me, when we drove down the “miracle mile” in San Rafeal, Ca, well she chimed: you aren’t so smart, you are just old!
And of course you have to live for a while, to learn how it works. As my GGreat Grandaddy from the state of Indiana, Homesteaders they were on some 40 acres or what ever… coon hunten guy, my great uncle… Warren, came back to the town of his ancestors, Warren In.
See I don’t really give much of a shit, I don’t even care, I am going to tell it.
No that was a little course, and hey: I don’t know very much, so… oh well. I am thinking up my next post attack thing, give me some minutes. good to know you all,, I mean that..
addenda to my posted comment, and geez hope I ain’t messin’ with your thesis Dr. Teller…
Revise: As my GGreat Grandaddy from the state of Indiana,… He said this: “well you don’t how to live until your about ready to die”.
He also said this about… when he came out the California back in the ’30′s… on a day trip over San Francisco… a ferry boat ride in those days… he said: (now if you ever been in Frisco… you seen the houses… not much land for a garden, just row by row of these things… I won’t describe em here and now… but… Grandad nailed it… He said: “Looks like a cemetary”.
Can’t really argue with that…. of course the whole world is a cemetary when you get down to it.