Award-winning
project finds seafood sold in Canada with high radiation levels
- Many samples well over contamination limit
- “Incredible discovery; Something unexpected may be lurking in Canadian waters”
- Believes dangerous Fukushima pollution carried across ocean
- “I hope people will open their eyes”
3
April, 2014
Metro
News, Mar. 24,
2014: Alberta student’s
science project finds high radiation levels in grocery-store
seafood [...]
Bronwyn Delacruz [...] said she was shocked to discover that, in the
wake of the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in Japan, the Canadian
Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) stopped testing imported foods for
radiation in 2012. [...] Delacruz studied a variety of seafoods –
particularly seaweeds – as part of an award-winning science project
that she will take to a national fair next month. [...] Her results
caught the attention of judges at the Peace River Regional Science
Fair, who moved her project along to the Canada-Wide Science Fair
[...]
Daily
Herald Tribune,
Mar. 25, 2014: Local
science project finds high levels of radiation in seaweed —
When Bronwyn Delacruz started testing seaweed in her living room last
August, she made an incredible discovery: Something unexpected may be
lurking in Canadian waters. [Delacruz] found disconcerting radiation
levels in seaweed products from local grocery stores and is concerned
for the health of families who may be consuming them. Her research on
the subject recently earned gold at the regional Canada-Wide Science
Fair [...] Delacruz tested more than 300 individual seaweed samples,
with 15 brands exported from New Brunswick, British Columbia,
California, Washington, China and Japan. Each was purchased in an
Alberta grocery [...] 0.5 Bq per square centimetre is widely
considered an actionable level of contamination [...] many of her
samples tested well over this amount. [...] Delacruz believes the
current has carried dangerous radiation from Japan’s east coast to
Canada’s portion of the Pacific Ocean. [...] and believes dangerous
radiation may only have reached the Canadian coastline recently.
[...] Delacruz is a CWSF Physical Award of Excellence in Physical
Earth and Chemical Sciences-winner [...]
Bronwyn
Delacruz,
Mar. 24, 2014: “Some of the kelp that I found was higher than what
the International Atomic Energy Agency sets as radioactive
contamination, which is 1,450 counts over a 10-minute period [...]
Some of my samples came up as 1,700 or 1,800.”
Bronwyn
Delacruz,
Mar. 25, 2014: “I think any dose of radiation can be harmful [...]
Any dose can cause negative health effects [...] I’m kind of
concerned that this is landing in our grocery stores and that if you
aren’t measuring it, you could just be eating this and bringing
home to your family. [...] Kelp was higher than what was considered
dangerous [...] Some of them came up to 1,700, 1,800 (counts). [...]
The way the currents and the radiation would arrive in Canada, it
wouldn’t arrive until now [...] My pre-Fukushima (nori) measured
about 400 (counts) [...] post-Fukushima measured around 500 to 600,
which also not dangerous, but it’s considerably higher and
statistically significantly higher too. [...] I eat a lot of seaweed
in almost everything [...] I would like the government to test before
they ‘OK’ imports from other countries [...] they’re just
relying on other countries to do it for us. [...] I hope people will
open their eyes to this.”
How
You Can Help:
Delacruz is fundraising to purchase a $15,000 germanium spectrometer
for the High School science department that can detect radiation in
fish and other complex foods. To donate, call Grande Prairie
Public School District Education Foundation at 780-532-4491.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.