[ RadSafe ] Salsman warning

ROY HERREN royherren2005 at yahoo.com
Sat Apr 10 16:36:43 CDT 2010


  James concern brings to mind a rather infamous incident from the 1970's at a Nuclear facility in Pennsylvania.  If I remember the near Urban myth like details of the story correctly, it seems that at the end of a work shift a worker was found to be contaminated.  After much unsuccessful research over several day as to the work related cause of the contamination, a survey was taken of the worker upon immediate arrival at the work site from his home at the beginning of his shift before he started work.  The worker was found to be contaminated from a source other than work...  What was that source of contamination?  Was it coal fly ash?  No, it was from naturally occurring Radon gas daughter products.  It seems that the worker had weather proofed his home so well that naturally occurring Radon  gas that was released from the soil under his house had built up in the house to a much greater extent that would otherwise naturally occur.

   My point in bringing up this story is to point out that rather than worrying about Uranium, perhaps our greater concern in regards to environmental radiation sources and emissions should be with the daughter products from Uranium decay.  What was it that Marie Sklodowska Curie discovered in a type of coal called pitchblende?  See  http://www.aip.org/history/curie/resbr2.htm   "She had to treat very large quantities of pitchblende, a ton of which the Curies received as a donation from the Austrian government" and "it took Marie over three years to isolate one tenth of a gram of pure radium chloride".   She received a Nobel prize in Chemistry in 1911 for her discovery of Polonium and Radium.  To this day Physicists in the United States still measure radioactivity in the unit named in her honor, the Curie (Ci), 3.7 X 10^10 disintegrations per second (the rate of decay of 1 gram of Radium).

   I believe that another posting Dan pointed out that Radon gas is believe to be the main source of Uranium miners lung cancer.  See http://physics.nist.gov/GenInt/Curie/schema.html and  http://physics.nist.gov/GenInt/Curie/Images/uraniumseries.gif

    In conclusion, I think there are other related issues of greater health concern than coal fly ash.  We have a long social history of tolerance of the coal related issues which has lead to the acceptance of the risk vs. benefit, e.g. long term potential health problems (a valid issue) vs. freezing to death on a long cold winter night.  It isn't a mystery as to why the peoples of cold climates adapted coal as an energy resource.  The mystery, in my humble opinion, is when will we scientifically evolve and move past utilization of this resource?  

Roy Herren 




________________________________
From: Doug Huffman <doug.huffman at wildblue.net>
To: radsafe at health.phys.iit.edu
Sent: Tue, April 6, 2010 12:41:37 PM
Subject: Re: [ RadSafe ] Salsman warning

In re windpower; the avoided cost of electricity here on this isolated 
Island is US$0.06 per KiloWatt-hour, that is the cost of electrical 
power only without the infrastructure costs.  You do the arithmetic.

As to the rest of your assertions, you are making the assertions, it is 
your burden to prove them but not ours to disprove them.

On 4/6/2010 14:27, James Salsman wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 6, 2010 at 11:55 AM, Doug Aitken
> <jdaitken at sugar-land.oilfield.slb.com>  wrote:
>>
>> You pose a rhetorical question about the suppression of information in the
>> Health Physics Society literature about the toxicity of uranium.
>
> It is not a rhetorical question.
>
>> And your apparent reason is that you have found multiple documents in other
>> (medical literature) sources regarding the topic, but only two documents
>> related to this in the HPS database.
>
> As far as I can tell, there are no documents on the HPS web site which
> accurately describe the carcinogenicity of uranium consistent with
> what is reported in any peer reviewed literature reviews of the past
> four decades.  Can anyone prove me wrong?
>
>> the great leap of illogical
>> connection between coal ash, the nuclear fuel chain and the use of depleted
>> uranium as pyrophoric incendiary munitions just emphasizes your agenda....
>
> I wonder what you think my agenda is.  I'm strongly in favor of
> research reactors and nuclear reactors for medical isotope production,
> but I don't think nuclear power has ever been as economical as wind
> power and (pumped storage) hydroelectricity.  I'm strongly opposed to
> uranyl contamination, whether it is from coal fly ash, depleted
> uranium munitions, or is naturally occurring.  Those are not radical
> viewpoints.  In fact, it's possible that individually, they all may be
> majority viewpoints.  Is there any evidence they are not?
>
> Is it possible that some in the HPS have become so accustomed to
> defending the use of pyrophoric depleted uranium munitions that they
> aren't willing or able to articulate the extent to which coal ash
> presents a more serious uranium contamination problem than nuclear
> reactor waste?
>
> Sincerely,
> James Salsman
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