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In reply to the discussion: I thought the sea star 'melting' was a problem related to acidification? [View all]RobertEarl
(13,685 posts)15. There are quite a few nuke facilities along the coast
And there was deposition from nuclear tests in the Pacific, and Chernobyl, and who knows what else.
That's what is so awful about radiation, some of it lasts for decades, even hundreds of years. It builds up in sediments and stays there.
On ENEnews.com is a recent report about how much atmospheric deposition from Fukushima explosions landed on the coast, and it was much more than a little bit. Then it rained and the runoff into the Pacific carried it to the shorelines where the sea stars live.
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I thought the sea star 'melting' was a problem related to acidification? [View all]
RobertEarl
Oct 2014
OP
Note particularly that coal plants are three times as radioactive as nuclear plants, and living
Recursion
Oct 2014
#45
One of these days they will prove that sea star "melting' has nothing to do with radiation
hobbit709
Oct 2014
#30
There's a big difference between saying radiation has nothing to do with the sea stars
hobbit709
Oct 2014
#64