FYI, the correct info on the Japanese nuke plant.

Andre Kesteloot andre.kesteloot at verizon.net
Tue Mar 15 11:09:04 CDT 2011


In the US , one of the units of measurement is the length of a  
football field.
Unfortunately, a recently-
added one is the Trillion of dollars
André N4ICK

Sent from my iPhone
Occasional  miStaKes may be blamed on the thickness of my finger and  
the small size of this keyboard.

On Mar 15, 2011, at 10:05, Joseph Bento <joseph at kirtland.com> wrote:

>
> On Mar 14, 2011, at 3:08 PM, Philip Miller Tate wrote:
>
>> You mean, we're not all going to die of radiation poisoning next  
>> week?
>>
>> The main problem is that the media cannot describe the scale of the  
>> disaster to the general public. In Britain, the general public (of  
>> which I am a member only at weekends) can only measure things in  
>> "London buses" or "Nelson's columns". Areas have to be referred to  
>> as "x times the size of Wales". Unfortunately, big disasters can  
>> only be measured in terms of "so many Hiroshimas" and it's not  
>> politically correct to use that particular unit in the present  
>> situation.
>
> I actually heard the Hiroshima reference on the radio this morning.   
> They called the potential for disaster as 1,000 times greater than  
> the bomb dropped on Hiroshima.  Here, it seems California is often  
> used as a basis of measurement.  The Japanese islands, for example,  
> would fit in an area about the size of California.  (Japan is  
> actually about 10% smaller, but about 3.5x the population.)  For  
> that matter the British Isles are about 100,000 sq/km larger in area  
> than Utah.  Nice to have comparisons.
>
> Joe, N6DGY
>
>>
>> It's more encouraging to hear the stories of human resilience and  
>> citizenship out there. Some members of my close friend's family had  
>> to walk home from Tokyo centre for seven hours. The temples all  
>> opened their doors; people were out on the streets offering food  
>> and drink to strangers walking home. Sure, they'd do that in  
>> London, but only in exchange for your Rolex or iPhone.
>>
>> The account below highlights one major problem of disaster  
>> planning: whatever you plan for, it's just a matter of time before  
>> a bigger one comes along. Meanwhile, I must dig out my old "Nuclear  
>> Power, Yes Please" badge that I proudly wore as a Physics  
>> undergraduate in the late 1970s.
>>
>> Phil M1GWZ
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 14 Mar 2011, at 16:12, Richard O'Neill wrote:
>>
>>> A well written account.  http://bravenewclimate.com/2011/03/13/fukushima-simple-explanation/
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