tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1765307840677473617.post442093737539327145..comments2024-03-27T00:22:35.272-07:00Comments on EXSKF: #Radiation in Tokyo: Over 2.7 Microsievert/Hr in Setagaya-ku on a School Routearevamirpal::laprimaverahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10637620330944911600noreply@blogger.comBlogger6125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1765307840677473617.post-72584910091281872602011-10-13T07:29:49.839-07:002011-10-13T07:29:49.839-07:00Maybe someone from Aum Shinrikyo used to live ther...Maybe someone from Aum Shinrikyo used to live there?Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1765307840677473617.post-36854055698597040342011-10-13T04:17:30.757-07:002011-10-13T04:17:30.757-07:00Jiji Tsushin article appeared.
bit.ly/qDoI3v
It s...Jiji Tsushin article appeared.<br />bit.ly/qDoI3v<br /><br />It says they found a few bottles in a wooden box under the floor of the house and the radiation level of the bottles was more than 30 microsievert per hour. The content of the bottle has not been identified yet.Tokyo Brown Tabbynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1765307840677473617.post-83239926081201555182011-10-13T03:17:08.315-07:002011-10-13T03:17:08.315-07:00According to a couple of evening news programs, th...According to a couple of evening news programs, this radiation is probably not from Fukusima. A professor of Tokyo Metropolitan University has analyzed the type of radionuclide and concluded it's radium with 90 percent chance. In addition, it was also reported that the radiation level in the yard of the house facing this hot spot is much higher, and some bottles have been found form under the floor of this house which show high level of radiation. What's inside?? Scary.Tokyo Brown Tabbynoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1765307840677473617.post-12768391192790671202011-10-12T23:36:09.376-07:002011-10-12T23:36:09.376-07:00YES! FINALLY!
This is how it is done. It is costl...YES! FINALLY!<br /><br />This is how it is done. It is costly and time consuming and takes a lot of people and detection equipment to do it properly, but it is the ONLY way.<br /><br />It is good enough, for now, to mark hotspots with paint so people know not to go there. Later, one must spray glue so radioactive dust doesn't fly or flow off to somewhere else.<br /><br />Then, when there is time and money, the contaminated stuff must be cut out and dumped into low-level radwaste storage.<br /><br />But the most important bit is this: to find all the hotspots. People need to organize. Japan is supposed to have the best civil defense in the world. It must spring into action, as if the country had been nuked again. Because it has, sort of.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1765307840677473617.post-20689274956897470172011-10-12T16:41:11.021-07:002011-10-12T16:41:11.021-07:00Hosaka is the name of the head of this district. H...Hosaka is the name of the head of this district. He's known to be aware of people's needs and even minorities like homeless children. He was assembly to the diet, came there as an opposition activist and became famous to ask more (critical) questions than anybody else. Then he decided to run for government of Setagaya, since there he could do more than at the diet, as he said. He himself was surprised of beeing elected. (My girlfriend met him in the '80s, when he was not a politician.)Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1765307840677473617.post-50660516182641315862011-10-12T14:07:20.673-07:002011-10-12T14:07:20.673-07:00Can someone explain to me how pressure washing is ...Can someone explain to me how pressure washing is supposed to work in this context? Suppose the water dislodges some radioactive particles: then what? Is all the water carefully collected for disposal? Or do the particles simply flow off with the water to a new location? In my experience, pressure washing splashes a lot of water around, and I've never once seen it collected for disposal.<br /><br />Mikemikenoreply@blogger.com