Radioactive contamination from the Fukushima power plant
disaster has been detected as far as almost 400 miles off Japan in the
Pacific Ocean, with water showing readings of up to 1,000 times more
than prior levels, scientists reported Tuesday.
But those results for the substance cesium-137 are far below the
levels that are generally considered harmful, either to marine animals
or people who eat seafood, said Ken Buesseler of the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts.
He spoke Tuesday in Salt Lake City at the annual Ocean Sciences Meeting, attended by more than 4,000 researchers this week.
The results are for water samples taken in June, about three months
after the power plant disaster, Buesseler said. In addition to thousands
of water samples, researchers also sampled fish and plankton and found
cesium-137 levels well below the legal health limit.
"We're not over the hump" yet in terms of radioactive contamination
of the ocean because of continued leakage from the plant, Buesseler said
in an interview before Tuesday's talk. He was chief scientist for the
cruise that collected the data.
The ship sampled water from about 20 miles to about 400 miles off the
coast east of the Fukushima plant. Concentrations of cesium-137
throughout that range were 10 to 1,000 times normal, but they were about
one-tenth the levels generally considered harmful, Buesseler said.
Cesium-137 wasn't the only radioactive substance released from the
plant, but it's of particular concern because of its long persistence in
the environment. Its half-life is 30 years. More >>
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