Big time data to be available soon
Do you guys remember the environmental monitoring report that came of the Wolf Creek NPP in Kansas a while back? It showed that there was a a rainout event in Kansas that was quite surprising. Levels of I-131 in milk at ~55 bq/l, much more than BRAWM saw in bay area milk.
Well check this out - it seems that most if not all NPPs have to issue annual reports showing levels of isotopes detected over the past year. And friends, this year is nearly over.
Got an NPP in your state/area? Look it up, and when the enviro report comes out, please make said info available here and anywhere else you can think of. This could be a gold mine of information.
BC12/27


Here's the the link
When the reports become available you ca find them here:
http://www.nrc.gov/reactors/operating/ops-experience/tritium/plant-info....
Thanks NEI for the link
Excellent. Sorry, didn't
Excellent.
Sorry, didn't mean to sound like Mr. Burns.
Thanks to all for links and responses. Keep your eyes open.
BC 12/29
Take a peek at this report bc .Can u compre to brawm data Ty
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/arxiv/pdf/1111/1111.4141v1.pdf
Measurement of airborne fission products in Chapel Hill, NC, USA from the Fukushima I reactor accident
-Brawm study for comparison -
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3177818/
Observations of Fallout from the Fukushima Reactor Accident in San Francisco Bay Area Rainwater
Eric B. Norman,* Christopher T. Angell, and Perry A. Chodash
"Note added in proof
After this manuscript was originally submitted, similar gamma-ray counting measurements were performed on samples of weeds collected in Oakland and on vegetables and milk sold commercially in the San Francisco Bay area. In some of these samples, low levels of the same fission products observed in the rainwater were also detected. The levels of activity observed in these samples also pose no hazard to the public."
http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.485
http://arxiv.org/abs/1103.4853
Arrival time and magnitude of airborne fission products from the Fukushima, Japan, reactor incident as measured in Seattle, WA, USA