1 hour ago on Twitter, from someone who actually measured it with his HORIBA Radi PA-1000. It seems he has already notified the city hall.
Picture on his tweet:
In his later tweets, he identifies the location as the front entrance of a high rise apartment building ("mansion" in Japanese). This one.
9 comments:
I am so glad I left Tokyo especially when I see videos like this. It amazes me that real estate companies are still selling mansions and homes.
Are people still buying since 3-11? I imagined that the real estate market would have grinded to a halt or there would be panic selling but that does not appear to be the case. Can anyone confirm? If you wanted to sell a mansion now in Tokyo could you get near the same price as you would before 3-11? How about buying, are the prices lower now or the same?
There are too many hot spots and radium bottles in Tokyo... another one was found in Meguro:
http://news.nifty.com/cs/headline/detail/kyodo-2011111001000527/1.htm
BTW, thank you very much for keeping us informed of what's going on!
What is the story with all these radium bottles? They're being found by themselves, no other objects associated with them?
Little gifts for the future from the past? WTF
This device only measures gamma. It is probably detecting cesium only. I wonder if there is any alpha or beta emitters in this area.
I have a You Tube Channel dedicated to educating and informing the World on how to remove radionuclides from in and outside the body. Please check out http://www.youtube.com/user/BioGreg777?feature=mhee .Got it approved for remediation of the environment here in the USA. My next video to upload will be on how to make laundry detergent to remove hot particles from your clothing. My PhD Toxicology partner and I have come up with a solution to remove hot particles from the lungs with the Omron Nebulyzer made in Japan.
Biogreg777
I'd suppose that some good for nothings were hired to dispose of radium, which they buried in new construction sites.
Biogreg777, leave your email here.
gscram2510@gmail.com
BioGreg777
"I'd suppose that some good for nothings were hired to dispose of radium, which they buried in new construction sites."
I think you are right. Some money and time were saved. That's the way it works in Japan. The guy that smiles to your face is going to fleece you if he can. But politely.
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