Radiation
from WIPP
RadCast
via Facebook
RadCast
created a visual aid for you to understand the amount of radiation
released at WIPP on Feb 15, 2014 just a few hours after the incident
of the drum explosion occurred a 1/2 mile deep into the salt caverns
in Carlsbad, New Mexico.
The
measurements are in Counts Per Second on this graph. A Bequerel is
one disintegration per second. The US regional locations show the
averages of counts per second as recorded by RadCast over the past 2
years. (To ascertain these numbers in counts per minute, just
multiply by 60.)
Geiger
counters are used to detect primarily atmospheric readings which is
the data RadCast used for this graph. They also detect much smaller
amounts then the monitors used by New Mexico University and WIPP, but
the differences in amounts detected need to be understood. There was
an enormous release from WIPP of Plutonium-239/240 and Americium-241,
a daughter of Plutonium-241. Pu-241 therefore must have been released
but was not among the tests shown in the CEMRC.
Even
if the ventilation system was working properly today, there is no
such thing as a 100% filtration. There's always at least a minute
amount of radiation being released. In this case, we know that the
amount of radiation in the cavern is so high that WIPP may never open
again. This remains to be seen, but what we know is that the
radiation is so high in the cavern that only robotics can go in to
test for measurements. And we also don't know the data from the
robots or if the robots were even able to collect data. If WIPP has
the data, they are not letting it out to the public. Data is the most
crucial tool we have in analyzing just how bad a nuclear incident is.
Without data, we can only speculate and by withholding data, the
nuclear industry can tell us that everything will be fine.
Station
A Activity/8 hour sampling
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