FDA will NOT be monitoring seafood...
The FDA will NOT be monitoring seafood in the wake of the Japanese Nuclear disaster. This seems beyond insane, especially considering the fact that the plant is STILL releasing radioactive water into the ocean and will be for some time.
http://www.adn.com/2011/04/16/1813982/fda-claims-no-need-to-test-pacific...


Radioactive Seaweed found in Puget Sound
Considering how large the Pacific Ocean is and that we are five thousand miles from Japan I thought it would take a long time before we could detect any radiation in our waters.Wrong,radioactive seaweed has been found in Puget Sound, Washington.Seaweed acts like a sponge when it comes to radiation, so it is first to become contaminated.
http://www.kirotv.com/news/27510887/detail.html.
Boycott USA Seafood
I see a global boycott of USA produced seafood in the very near future.
Does the FDA leadership have rocks for brains?
You have ZERO reason to
You have ZERO reason to believe ANY government or corporate media.
That leaves you with your own brain and it's ability to discern the information from less questionable, but still not necessarily reliable, sources.
Remember, these filthy criminals have no problem dropping 'depleted' uranium on 100% innocent people - uranium dust which emits alpha radiation and has a half life of over a BILLION years. google "babies in fallujah" if you want to know what happens to people who inhale DU dust.
And they are doing it RIGHT NOW - AGAIN - in the name of 'protecting civilians' in Libya. How the **** do you "protect civilians" by dusting them with DU? huh?
How does anyone look at a criminal government like that and think it is reformable?
Well I guess that I will not
Well I guess that I will not be eating fish from Japan and Alaska. Fear of the unknow has me more unsure. Thanks FDA.
Do any fish migrate from Japan to Alaska?
Not sure specifically what
Not sure specifically what migratory patterns they follow, but large species of fish do migrate great distances.
BRAWM Team, any plans to
BRAWM Team, any plans to include pacific seafood to your long list of samples to test?
Much appreciation to all of you for providing information and making your data public.
See no evil, hear no evil,
See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil.
"Truth is only worthwhile
"Truth is only worthwhile when it is useful". If this doesn't prove there is an unconscious/conscious conspiracy, I don't know what would.
Great!
One less thing to worry about : [
Just kidding - it's absolutely scandalous. please write your representatives!
Indeed- incompetence at
Indeed- incompetence at every level.
So sad
Pacific Bluefin Tuna
Scientific Name: Thunnus orientalis
Bluefin tuna are the largest of the tuna species, reaching upwards of 680 kg. There are three species in each of the Pacific, Atlantic and Southern Oceans. In all oceans bluefins are known for their impressive migrations, routinely crossing ocean basins. In the Pacific, tagging studies indicate there is only one stock with a spawning ground off southern Japan. In the first few years of life some young tuna make the extensive migration from Japan to the eastern Pacific off California and Mexico. Their decision to come east has been linked to the abundance of prey off Japan. Off California and Mexico their annual movements and preferred habitat are poorly understood.
Like all tunas, bluefin are endothermic and can regionally elevate body temperature above ambient water temperature. Comparing results from bluefin with yellowfin and albacore tuna will provide important insights into how endothermy influences movements and habitat selection.
In addition to being the largest, blue fin are the most highly prized tuna on the Japanese sashimi market. As a result of the associated fishing pressure, populations if Atlantic and Southern Bluefin are 15-20% of historic levels.
Well, if the radiation doesn't kill them off...an upside?
Maybe people will stop eating so much seafood for awhile and the species can repopulate. Overfishing was destroying the world's fisheries anyway. Maybe they can survive this and a generation or two will see bigger populations.
Just sayin'...
Culinary Angst: 'Chicken of the Sea' not so palatable these days
'Chicken of the Sea' and other seafoods somehow don't sound as appetizing with a dash or so of Fukushima's radioactive particles.
Known to be detected in the soil and possible in the effluent from Fukushima:
Pu-238
Pu-239
Pu-240
I-131
Cs-137
Tellurium
Barium
Niobium
As-74
Cs-136
Cs-137
La-140
Cl-38
Molybdenum
Technecium
Lanthanum
Beryllium
Silver
(sounds like a pretty good indication of having had a meltdown.)
FYI If you care to read:
-Off my menu: All Seafood! Why? because the oceans have become the prime military and industrial sewer and the last thing I want is to inadvertently ingest enough nuclear material to invite some horrific terminal disease such as leukemia, lymphoma,lung,breast or other cancers known to be more common since 1946...
FYI:
http://swashzone.blogspot.com/2011/04/fukushima-mon-amour.html
Despite the catastrophic scope of last month’s earthquake and tsunami, the people of the Rising Sun consider themselves fortunate in at least one respect. Radioactive clouds of steam and smoke have blown eastward over the Pacific Ocean and away from major population centers in Japan. Yet, millions of gallons of radioactive coolant water were discharged at sea, and it may be years before the impact on ocean ecosystems is fully understood.
Ocean dumping of nuclear waste was banned by international treaty in the 1970s. Of concern to scientists now is not the immediate level of radioactivity but the longer-term consequences. Even minute amounts of radiation have the potential to be absorbed by plants and animals and enter the food chain. As smaller fish are eaten by larger fish, heavy metals and their radioactive counterparts bio-accumulate up the food chain until the ultimate consumer – the human population – is put at maximum risk.
Nuclear waste is a subset of the larger problem of industrial pollution, and Fukushima is merely the latest chapter of a long and appalling saga: Minamata, Love Canal, Bhopal, Deepwater Horizon, Libby Asbestos, Exxon Valdez, Three Mile Island, and Chernobyl, as the most grotesque examples. Entire ecosystems destroyed for generations, landscapes and seascapes laid waste and barren, dead zones and ghost towns, crippled economies and ruined lives … our world dies by a thousand blows.
To maintain lavish lifestyles, we consume prodigious amounts of energy and pay for it – not just in unit costs per BTU – but in terms of health and human life. In this unholy bargain, we have come to regard consumers and workers as fungibles and expendables, as a necessary sacrifice in exchange for a profligate and reckless economic system gone mad. Yet, incident after incident, and year after year, we continue to place our trust in the infallibility of our technologies and enterprises. It is a pact made with Mephistopheles Inc.
http://socket.kongshem.com/2007/10/farallon-islands-nuclear-waste-dump.html photo of bay with map and short video at site.
The Farallon Islands Nuclear Waste Dump
If you live in the San Francisco Bay Area, you may be surprised to learn that "more than 47,800 drums and other containers of low-level radioactive waste were dumped onto the ocean floor west of San Francisco between 1946 and 1970." (Source: The U.S. Geological Survey, a bureau of the Department of the Interior.)
Just 25 to 30 miles offshore from the Golden Gate bridge -- in a marine wildlife sanctuary, no less -- the ocean floor is littered with rusting 55-gallon barrels of radioactive waste. The U.S. Navy shipped this toxic cargo from the Radiological Defense Laboratory at the Hunters Point shipyard in San Francisco and dropped it in the sea near the Farallon Islands -- creating the first and largest offshore nuclear waste dump in the United States. Navy gunners were instructed to shoot holes in the barrels that didn't sink right away.
Nearly 50,000 drums of nuclear waste sounds bad enough, but the ocean floor around the Farallon Islands is host to even more toxic garbage: Namely, the radioactive wreck of a ten-thousand-ton aircraft carrier, used as a nuke target during the 1946 Bikini Atoll atomic bomb tests.
Eager to learn what might happen to a warship when an atomic bomb explodes nearby, the U.S. Navy placed the USS Independence within one-half mile of ground zero during the "Able" atomic bomb test of July 1, 1946. This was the first of two atomic bomb tests conducted on the Bikini Atoll as part of Operation Crossroads:
Highly radioactive but still afloat after the blast, the bombed-out hulk was then towed to San Francisco's Hunters Point shipyard for decontamination experiments.
After five years of fruitless sandblasting, the Navy lost interest in the useless wreck. In 1951, the Independence was towed out of the bay and sunk near the Farallon Islands as just another (albeit quite large) chunk of radioactive waste.
The California State Lands Commission shipwreck database pinpoints the exact location of the radioactive shipwreck of the USS Independence as: Latitude 37deg 28'24'N, Longitude 123deg 07'36'W. This interactive map shows the position of those coordinates:
comments:
brigham said...
wow, why did they choose the islands? are there other such sites off the coast?
December 21, 2009 10:49 PM
James Stevens said...
In 1979, I happened to be in the library at Scripps Institute of Oceanography involved in a research project. While there, I ran across a report detailing the dumping of 1,200 barrels of nuclear waste at the Farralons. Similarly to your report above, the barrels were incased in concrete. However, the report diverged from the story above in the following respects. This report concerned the dumping of Plutonium waste from the Hanford, Washington site and which was anything but low-level. It expressed grave concerns about the environmental impact of leakages on the Pacific bioshpere with theoretical scenarios over a period of twenty years, the length of time the report predicted would lead to degradation of the concrete containers. The extreme toxicity of the waste as well the quanitity of it would eventually lead to a major ecological collapse, the report concluded. The information contained therein was in explicit detail with charts of radioactivity levels, salt water dispersion rates, directional sub sea current data indicating likely spread patterns and again, concluded that the eventual effect of the toxicity levels would be the interuption of plankton life cycles over a large geographic scale compromising the ongoing integrity of the entire Pacific biosphere. It ended with the commentary that from an engineering perspective, little or nothing could be done to prevent that collapse which, they concluded, was inevitable.
December 21, 2010 4:55 PM
simon752 said...
I'm originally grew up in Fairfax, Marin county, and not only heard but saw the large amount of Breast Cancer victims within the bay area. Could this be the cause?!?
February 7, 2011 8:35 PM
BigWhiteDog said...
I'm sorry but to tie this to any Marin county cancers is one heck of an irresponsible leap. If such clusters were found in Sonoma, San Fran, Alameda and San Mateo Counties then maybe.
If your premise was correct then there should be corresponding clusters in Farallones researchers, fishermen who frequented the area before it was closed off, and persons living right on the coast.
I'm more interested in the fact that a radioactive ship was being sandblasted at Hunters Point for 5 years. What happened to the sand and other waste and what is/was the health status of those workers.
April 8, 2011 9:35 AM
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My grandfather was involved
My grandfather was involved with the decontamination experiments on the ships from nuclear testing. At the time, radiation was very poorly understood, and he ended up dying from a brain tumor about 8 years later.
That's really sad. I wonder
That's really sad. I wonder how many others died of 'mysterious' things.