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Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
spɹɐʍoɔ snoɯʎuouɐ
Vocem sine nomine audivit!
User ID: 84104
04-03-2012 03:31 PM

Posts: 14,490



Post: #1
Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” — 15.7 million year half-life — Almost undetectable — Traveled along with iodine-131 from Fukushima — Concentrates in hotspots

Dartmouth scientists track radioactive iodine from Japan nuclear reactor meltdown
http://www.sciencecodex.com/dartmouth_sc...down-89004


Quote:[...] The radioisotope iodine-131, a significant constituent of the fallout, is a by-product of nuclear fission, highly radioactive, acutely toxic and presents a health risk upon its release to the environment. It does have a relatively short half-life, which is both a blessing and a curse, Landis notes. “It releases a lot of radioactivity, which makes it dangerous, but it’s gone very quickly so there is no long term exposure risk,” he says. Its high radioactivity, however, makes it very detectable by the gamma-ray spectroscopy instruments used by the Dartmouth team in its analyses.

This is not the case with another isotope, iodine-129, released concurrently with iodine-131. It is not as radioactive, which makes it much harder to measure, but it is much longer lasting [15.7 million year half-life] and, as it concentrates in certain areas over time, it may become more hazardous. “Due to its long half-life and continued release from ongoing nuclear energy production, [iodine-129] is perpetually accumulating in the environment and poses a growing radiological risk,” the authors point out.

The production rate of these two isotopes in a nuclear reactor occurs at a fixed ratio of 3 parts iodine-131 to one part iodine-129. The two substances travel together, so the presence of the easily detectable isotope also signals the presence of the longer-lived one. “If you have a recent event like Fukushima, you are going to have both present. The iodine-131 is going to decay away pretty quickly over the course of weeks, but the iodine-129 is there forever, essentially,” Landis says. However, he explains, “Once the iodine-131 decays, you lose your ability to track the migration of either isotope.”

Thus, the group’s research turned toward the development of an innovative alternative approach to measuring and tracking the iodine. What became an important off-shoot of their work was the methodology of using the benign radioisotope, beryllium-7, as the tracking indicator. It’s an easily detected natural radionuclide, and is routinely used by the Dartmouth researchers in their environmental analyses.

The Dartmouth researchers have shown that beryllium-7 follows the same transport paths as the iodine isotopes. By ascertaining the ratio of association of the beryllium to the iodine, tracing the beryllium-7 as it moves through the environment then allowed the researchers to track the parallel transport of iodine, and to demonstrate the accumulation of iodine fallout in stream sediments.

Surficial redistribution of fallout 131iodine in a small temperate catchment

http://www.pnas.org/content/109/11/4064.short

Quote:Isotopes of iodine play significant environmental roles, including a limiting micronutrient (127I), an acute radiotoxin (131I), and a geochemical tracer (129I). But the cycling of iodine through terrestrial ecosystems is poorly understood, due to its complex environmental chemistry and low natural abundance. To better understand iodine transport and fate in a terrestrial ecosystem, we traced fallout 131iodine throughout a small temperate catchment following contamination by the 11 March 2011 failure of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power facility. We find that radioiodine fallout is actively and efficiently scavenged by the soil system, where it is continuously focused to surface soils over a period of weeks following deposition. Mobilization of historic (pre-Fukushima) 137cesium observed concurrently in these soils suggests that the focusing of iodine to surface soils may be biologically mediated. Atmospherically deposited iodine is subsequently redistributed from the soil system via fluvial processes in a manner analogous to that of the particle-reactive tracer 7beryllium, a consequence of the radionuclides’ shared sorption affinity for fine, particulate organic matter. These processes of surficial redistribution create iodine hotspots in the terrestrial environment where fine, particulate organic matter accumulates, and in this manner regulate the delivery of iodine nutrients and toxins alike from small catchments to larger river systems, lakes and estuaries.

http://enenews.com/forever-iodine-129-gr...um=twitter

Hiding3
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raisinbread
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User ID: 87046
04-03-2012 03:53 PM

 



Post: #2
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
Zardoz

If you are interested in iodine fallout check these.

http://enenews.com/nilu-ends-public-fore...ada-videos

The videos are very iodine and xenon doomish.
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spɹɐʍoɔ snoɯʎuouɐ
Vocem sine nomine audivit!
User ID: 84104
04-03-2012 04:39 PM

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Post: #3
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
raisinbread  Wrote:
Zardoz

I am not a giant floating head, thank you
Cheers
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spɹɐʍoɔ snoɯʎuouɐ
Vocem sine nomine audivit!
User ID: 84104
04-03-2012 05:35 PM

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Post: #4
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
raisinbread  Wrote:
Zardoz

If you are interested in iodine fallout check these.

http://enenews.com/nilu-ends-public-fore...ada-videos

this link is for a video from may last year

anyone have a worldwide map of the how much it has spread from this year?
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Her Ladyship
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User ID: 86781
04-03-2012 05:37 PM

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Post: #5
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
Yes we need current maps End
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spɹɐʍoɔ snoɯʎuouɐ
Vocem sine nomine audivit!
User ID: 84104
04-03-2012 05:51 PM

Posts: 14,490



Post: #6
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
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Astrochik
seeking the truth - good or bad
User ID: 55237
04-03-2012 06:38 PM

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Post: #7
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
Bump

Gun Control: History, Philosophy and Ethics by Stefan Molyneux
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Luvapottamus
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User ID: 82349
04-03-2012 06:43 PM

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Post: #8
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
Bump

There is no such thing as sovereign debt. End the FED, bring back Greenbacks.
Wall Street Sales Tax http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vb5OQUElilo
United Front Against Austerity
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raisinbread
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User ID: 87046
04-03-2012 07:36 PM

 



Post: #9
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
3 to 1 ratio of iodine 131 to 129 has to be thrown out the window because they used sea water for emergency cooling.(should have used sand)

They have destroyed hard numbers to conceal it from everyone.
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/dy/national/T120321004935.htm
Fukushima govt deleted SPEEDI data

http://www.sciencecodex.com/dartmouth_sc...down-89004
Dartmouth scientists track radioactive iodine from Japan nuclear reactor meltdown

here's some off the coast of Cali.
http://www.scientificamerican.com/articl...ornia-kelp
Radioactive Iodine from Fukushima Found in California Kelp
Canopy-Forming Kelps as California’s Coastal Dosimeter: 131I from Damaged Japanese Reactor Measured in Macrocystis pyrifera
http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/es20...ode=esthag

No new fallout maps but we can see some of the fallout they allow us to see.I can't find any besides people on youtube talking about rain.
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raisinbread
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User ID: 87046
04-03-2012 10:57 PM

 



Post: #10
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
WSPEEDI Simulation Showed 10 Terabecquerels/Hour Iodine-131 in Chiba on March 15 Last Year, Data Still Not Disclosed
10 terabequerels = 10,000,000,000,000 becquerels.

Atleast 1/3 of that 's 1-129.
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raisinbread
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User ID: 87046
04-03-2012 10:57 PM

 



Post: #11
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
raisinbread  Wrote:
WSPEEDI Simulation Showed 10 Terabecquerels/Hour Iodine-131 in Chiba on March 15 Last Year, Data Still Not Disclosed
10 terabequerels = 10,000,000,000,000 becquerels.

Atleast 1/3 of that 's 1-129.

http://ex-skf.blogspot.com/2012/04/wspee...ed-10.html
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spɹɐʍoɔ snoɯʎuouɐ
Vocem sine nomine audivit!
User ID: 84104
04-04-2012 04:10 PM

Posts: 14,490



Post: #12
RE: Iodine-129 “a growing radiological risk” Almost undetectable—Concentrates in hotspots
Webcam displays Fukushima Incident March 10th to 25th
Uploaded by Stiegsfeld
Date Uploaded : Mar 25, 2011
Quote: This video is made from a number of 234 webcam pictures shot during the past two weeks at the TEPCO nuclear power plant in Fukushima, Japan.

The pictures are taken from the well known webcam (featured in many press releases). From 5am to 7pm one picture is shot each hour.

However – this is first time the full story gets published: the webcam hosting homepage had several blackouts and downtimes – partly for days. I was able to get direct access to the never displayed pictures by means of some “tricks” (within leagal [sic] limits).

Have a look and make up your own mind. [...]

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FobcdNqlcVw



Radiation plume heading toward Hawaii, says Japan gov’t study
http://enenews.com/japan-govt-radioactiv...evel-photo
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