With respect, I think your numbers are unjustifiably high. And difficult to verify. Fukushima, for example, is a nothing, despite all the anxiety hype. Chernobyl was a nasty piece of work, but even that has been overblown.
OK then, just where ARE the 3 corium that escaped their containment 11 years ago?? Enough there to kill the Pacific, if it hasn't already with 500 tons of river water flowing over the corium every single day for the last 11 years. All this is difficult to verify because the japs are lying about everything and putting pretty barriers up to hide reality of the destroyed reactors. We already know the life span of a worker to fall into the pit is less than a minute. Until you do real digging to prove me wrong, my 5-6 years of digging says it IS a huge deal.
You are borderline coherent. There are no "corium" (there are reactor cores). They were contained, but melted down. The heat caused chemical reactions between the fuel cladding (e.g., zirconium) and the coolant water, resulting in hydrogen explosions and some release of radioactive gases (e.g., xenon), some of which got into the ocean. The whole story is ably summarized in this entry:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_Daiichi_nuclear_disaster_casualties
If you haven't been able to disprove what the Japanese are saying, how can you know they are lying? Your remark about lifespan is ridiculous. Only one man died who worked on the recovery, and it was from lung cancer that was imputed to radiation exposure. This digging is enough to show that your 5-6 years of digging was worthless.
With respect, I think your numbers are unjustifiably high. And difficult to verify. Fukushima, for example, is a nothing, despite all the anxiety hype. Chernobyl was a nasty piece of work, but even that has been overblown.
OK then, just where ARE the 3 corium that escaped their containment 11 years ago?? Enough there to kill the Pacific, if it hasn't already with 500 tons of river water flowing over the corium every single day for the last 11 years. All this is difficult to verify because the japs are lying about everything and putting pretty barriers up to hide reality of the destroyed reactors. We already know the life span of a worker to fall into the pit is less than a minute. Until you do real digging to prove me wrong, my 5-6 years of digging says it IS a huge deal.
You are borderline coherent. There are no "corium" (there are reactor cores). They were contained, but melted down. The heat caused chemical reactions between the fuel cladding (e.g., zirconium) and the coolant water, resulting in hydrogen explosions and some release of radioactive gases (e.g., xenon), some of which got into the ocean. The whole story is ably summarized in this entry: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fukushima_Daiichi_nuclear_disaster_casualties
If you haven't been able to disprove what the Japanese are saying, how can you know they are lying? Your remark about lifespan is ridiculous. Only one man died who worked on the recovery, and it was from lung cancer that was imputed to radiation exposure. This digging is enough to show that your 5-6 years of digging was worthless.
Thank you for your construction paper critique.. I will not address your personal criticisms of me vios con Dios, amiga.
https://www.bing.com/search?q=fukashima+radiation+leaks+%2B+2021&form=ANNTH1&refig=788235908cd146e288d5f6c8a0f790c8&sp=3&qs=SC&pq=fukushima&sk=PRES1LS2&sc=5-9&cvid=788235908cd146e288d5f6c8a0f790c8