Friday, October 21, 2011

57.5 Microsieverts/Hr in Kashiwa City, Chiba

After the Setagaya-ku, Tokyo's radiation scare turned out to be radium, what could this be this time in Kashiwa City, Chiba Prefecture, where the radiation level remains elevated?

From Nikkei Shinbun (11:24PM JST 10/21/2011):

千葉県柏市は21日、同市根戸の市有地で毎時57.5マイクロシーベルトの高い放射線量を計測したと発表した。原因は不明だが計測値が極端に高いため「福島第1原子力発電所事故の影響とは考えにくい」(総務部)としている。

Kashiwa City in Chiba Prefecture announced on October 21 that the very high radiation of 57.5 microsieverts/hour was detected on the land owned by the city in Nedo District. The cause of the high radiation is unknown. Since the measured number is extremely high, "It is hard to believe this is from the Fukushima I Nuclear Plant accident", says the city's general affairs department.

 現場は更地で、57.5マイクロシーベルトは地表から30センチ程度掘ったところで計測。10メートル離れると毎時0.3マイクロシーベルトまで低下した。市は半径3メートル以内を立ち入り禁止にし、24日以降に土の除去などを進める方針。

It is a vacant lot, and 57.5 microsieverts/hour radiation was detected 30 centimeter below the surface of the ground. The radiation dropped to 0.3 microsievert/hour at 10 meters from the spot. The city has designated the 3-meter radius from the spot as off-limit, and is planning to remove the soil sometime after October 24.

 18日に市民から高い放射線量を計測したとの連絡を受け調査した。

The city had received information from a citizen on October 18 that there was a high radiation spot, and the city tested on its own.

The city's announcement is here (in Japanese). According to the announcement,

  • The city received a telephone call on October 18 from the neighborhood association that there was a high radiation spot;

  • On October 19, the city measured the radiation at the location which is owned by the city. Radiation exceeding 10 microsieverts/hour was measured at a particular spot;

  • On October 20, with the officials of the neighborhood association present, the city measured the radiation again. The radiation survey meter of the city couldn't not measure over 10 microsieverts/hour;

  • On October 21, the city asked the Chiba Prefectural Environment Foundation to measure the radiation. After digging the soil at the location, maximum 57.5 microsieverts/hour at 30 centimeters below the surface was confirmed.

The yellow marker is where the spot is (from a tweet by a resident):


It's a thin strip of land in the middle of residential/commercial mixed neighborhood.

5 comments:

jmdesp said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
jmdesp said...

Do you know that most incidents by far that have exposed civilians to health damaging level of radiation had no relation with the nuclear industry ?

Wikipedia has a list, many were deadly :
Wikipedia - List of civilian radiation accidents

The worst ones were frequently about scrap metal scavengers putting their hand on a medical radiation source.

I need to check the numbers, but it may be that on the whole more people have been killed from acute radiation poisoning in such incidents, than in civilian nuclear incidents.

The fact than the highest level of radiation is under the ground, whereas a deposit from Fukushima would on the ground, very strongly suggest there is no relation. It's a very good thing of course that such contaminations can be detected thanks to the attention brought to them at the moment.

PS: Rewrote the comment to correct a link error

Anonymous said...

LMFAO their versioning is worse, its better to think that everything is totally out of control rather than just Fukushima Dai-ichi

kintaman said...

jmdesp. Keep in mind there has never been a Fukushima before. Let's see how this plays out before we make any judgements.

Anonymous said...

Of course it's related, Sherlock.
The spectrum readings point to huge amounts of Cs137 and Cs134, thought to have accumulated either naturally by rainwater or by illegal dumping of contaminated waste.
sorakuma dot com /2011/10/22/4873

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