Our Outdoor and Indoor radiation monitors detected an unusual spike in airborne radioactivity, peaking at 6am this morning. The spike coincided with this morning's rainfall. The spike is unusual in that both our outdoor and indoor monitors picked up the spike; the intensity of the spike is also higher than would be expected. See the image below
Do you think this is related to the highly radioactive steam that was detected at Fukushima last week? Alternatively, do you think it could be related to the St. Louis landfill fire, which has apparently moved closer to the nuclear waste than previously recognized?
ReplyDelete< http://enenews.com/fukushima-unit-3-steaming-yet-again-asahi-high-radiation-levels-detected-by-where-steam-observed-third-time-in-a-week-tepco-does-not-know-where-its-coming-from-photos >
< http://enenews.com/report-landfill-fire-has-moved-beyond-equipment-meant-to-stop-its-advance-toward-radioactive-wastes-essentially-the-fire-line-is-breached-st-louis-official-something-ne >
Unknown, could be Fukushima; could be our local nuke plant which had a turbine fire, or it could be our local radioactive landfill superfund site.
ReplyDeleteIf it is from Fukushima it would have to be wide spread as the Jet Stream has been inconsistent.
My guess is that it was a local source, but more research is required