Belz...
Fiend God
Who, Godzilla?
This thread is for adults, Punshhh. Please don't come here either peddling your silly ideas or making fun of dead people.
Who, Godzilla?

This thread is for adults, Punshhh. Please don't come here either peddling your silly ideas or making fun of dead people.
That makes it sound like a real problem.
Godzilla (a cross between a gorilla and a whale) is for adults.
I have learned two units of measurement I had never heard of before. The sievert and the becquerel. I still don't really know what they are, but it seems like there are a lot of them.
I have learned two units of measurement I had never heard of before. The sievert and the becquerel. I still don't really know what they are, but it seems like there are a lot of them.
There have been no fatalities resulting from the leaks at Fukushima, and risks to human health are thought to be low.
Analysis
Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News
Why the uprating? What it does not mean is that things have got worse at the plant. Rather, Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (Nisa) has re-analysed data from the incident and decided that collectively the releases of radioactivity mean it slots into a level seven categorisation.
Radioactivity is measured in bequerels (Bq); a million million of these is a terabequerel (TBq).
The Fukushima figure is clearly beyond the threshold for classification as a level seven event, although an order of magnitude lower than the 5.2 million TBq released from Chernobyl.
But that tells you nothing about the danger to people. Bequerels are a measure of the rate of radioactive decay - one atomic nucleus per second.
By contrast, sieverts measure the likely medical impact of the radiation to which an individual is exposed. And a huge number of bequerels does not automatically translate into a huge amount of sieverts.
"We have upgraded the severity level to seven as the impact of radiation leaks has been widespread from the air, vegetables, tap water and the ocean," said Minoru Oogoda of Japan's Nuclear and Industrial Safety Agency (Nisa), the government's nuclear watchdog.
One official from Tepco said that radiation leaks had not stopped completely and could eventually exceed those at Chernobyl, Reuters news agency reported.
However, a nuclear safety agency spokesman told reporters the leaks were still small compared to those at the plant in Ukraine, then part of the Soviet Union.
"In terms of volume of radioactive materials released, our estimate shows it is about 10% of what was released by Chernobyl," he said.

Why we can't manage anyhow? Were we not without it since our evolution? At the moment can also include what odds we have added & we need it for those unhealthful odds. We substituted A.Cs and cut the trees which were natural A.C providers.
Even if you encase it you still have to ensure it remains cool. Part of the continuing problem at Chenobyl is that the containment structure is not air-tight and that the radioactive sources are not easily containable because of the severity of the accident.Cooling reactors(radioactive materials?) & controling spread of radiation & radioactive material (if monentary loss is immaterial) seem to be need of time to handle crisis in Japan. I am trying to know the difference in 1. keeping radioactive material in current & anticipated state of nuclear plant at Japan,2. Burrying it into concrete & 3. dumping whole plant or in pieces into the Sea..to control the current crisis esp. health & life effecting. What can be the impact of keeping radioactive material into Sea? Will it cool & stop radiating esp. to humans there?
I doubt a tree outside a home can cool the interior of the home. It may help keep from the home from getting as warm as it might otherwise have, but it's not magically going to remove the heat from inside the house.
Besides, why is it either-or? How about folks replace their old, energy inefficient air conditioners with new models that achieve the same cooling while using much less energy?
Even if you encase it you still have to ensure it remains cool. Part of the continuing problem at Chenobyl is that the containment structure is not air-tight and that the radioactive sources are not easily containable because of the severity of the accident.
At Chernobyl there is an artifact called the Elephant's Foot - a congealed mass that solidified after flowing down from the core, an honest-to-god meltdown, rather than the over-dramatised 'China syndrown' scare stories. It's hideously radioactive but hardly a serious risk because it doesn't dissipate anywhere. It can't be encased in concrete though because the concrete would act as an insulator and cause the temperature to rise again!
Fukishima has nothing that even remotely compares to Cherobyl. The only leakage has been from contaminated water.