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Fukushima Contaminants Found As Far North As Alaska's Bering Strait

Radioactive contamination from Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant hit by a tsunami in 2011 has drifted as far north as waters off a remote Alaska island in the Bering Strait, scientists said on Wednesday. Reuters reports: Analysis of seawater collected last year near St. Lawrence Island revealed a slight elevation in levels of radioactive cesium-137 attributable to the Fukushima disaster, the University of Alaska Fairbanks Sea Grant program said. The newly detected Fukushima radiation was minute. The level of cesium-137, a byproduct of nuclear fission, in seawater was just four-tenths as high as traces of the isotope naturally found in the Pacific Ocean. Those levels are far too low to pose a health concern, an important point for people living on the Bering Sea coast who subsist on food caught in the ocean.

Those levels are far too low to pose a health concern, an important point for people living on the Bering Sea coast who subsist on food caught in the ocean, Sheffield said. Until the most recent St. Lawrence Island sample was tested by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, the only other known sign of Fukushima radiation in the Bering Sea was detected in 2014 by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

3 of 75 comments (clear)

  1. So what by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are lots of contaminants from lots of things in lots of places.

    We can detect tiny trace amounts of them with the instruments we have today.

    And of course there is no health concern. I'm glad that was in the summary, because there are people who are ignorant enough to believe otherwise.

  2. Re:How is 4/10 of normal an elevated level? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How is 4/10 of normal an elevated level?

    Obviously the journalist is an idiot.

    Here is a more competently written source: Fukushima radiation found in Bering Sea.

    The concentration of cesium 137 went from 2.0 to 2.4 becquerels per cubic meter.

  3. This is news? by Gription · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The Pacific Ocean in the Northern Hemisphere circulates in a clockwise direction. That puts Alaska as the 2nd place the current will reach after Russia.
    This isn't news. This is expected.