
@lillymunster brilliant I was worried that it would be read that fuku was now safe and I believe that was the idea behind inviting them in, to give the planet the inpression that everything was honky dorey
by elainekirk 11/12/2011 9:27:12 PM

@Ian This is what the IAEA and most experts interviewed have said, it is only i-131 adding to the mystery. If it was a nuclear power reactor or a bomb of some sort we would see other isotopes.
Edano was looking at Russia due to wind patterns. They have an institute at Moscow Uni for nuclear physics and RosAtom helps with it. I have to wonder of the possibility of one of the research reactors doing things without telling the IAEA and had a mishap
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:27:59 PM

@elainekirk That seems to be this week's PR blitz out of the govt officials and TEPCO.
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:28:31 PM

berlusconi finally resigned !!! :)
by Edano 11/12/2011 9:30:26 PM

Marie Curie Institute in Poland. They have a live rad detector online.
www.radioaktywnosc.umcs.lublin.plby lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:30:27 PM


It looks nothing but this spot is consiststant throughout and even though the other monitors pick up the big readings I think we should keep this spot in mind
by elainekirk 11/12/2011 9:34:24 PM

Radiation Detection Network for Slovenia
www.radioaktivnost.siby lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:34:41 PM

@lillymunster the german plant leakage was just a xenon release on refuelling due to "leakers". nothing unusual, no iodine, only very badly produced fuel rods.
by Edano 11/12/2011 9:35:34 PM

@Ian The I-131 reactors are different than a power reactor. They do something so only 1-131 is produced.
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:35:38 PM

@Elaine where is that spot? I can't make out the geography on that
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:36:10 PM

@lillymunster slovenia.
by Edano 11/12/2011 9:36:34 PM

krsko (name of the nuke) :)
by Edano 11/12/2011 9:37:38 PM

Serbia radiation monitoring
www.ekoplan.gov.rsby lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:37:57 PM

Serbia doesn't provide historical data
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:40:05 PM

@Edano - what is the issue with krsko? Added it to the google map
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:40:35 PM

@lillymunster from here:
www.erinnerungsforum.net"The Data picked up is most propably from Drnovo NPP
I’ve been watching this NPP in Drnovo ( in Slovenia)
in horror since August 17th this year
Since Fuku I’ve made it a habbit to watch everydays values that are being updated
Drnovo has been releasing since 17th of August high amounts of I-131, CS-137, CS-134, Co-69, T Alpha Art+T Beta Art
I’ve contacted various departments to NEVER receive an answer
As an example the measurments for today 12th Nov ending time 12.00 are as follows (i report max values)
Location name SIAIR Drnov
Station Name Drnovo
LOngtude 15.5
Latitude 45.9
I-131 o.oo831 Bq/m cubique
CS-137 0.446 ”
CS-134 0.671 ”
CO-60 0.347 ”
T Beta art 0.0338
T Beta art 0.467
This are extreemly high values and for all this months nobody ever reported anything
Today the station in Rovanjemi has also been picking up I-131, CS-134(5.4299E-07 Bq/m cub.) CS-137 (5.23E-07 Bq/mcub)and CO-60(7,o7E-07 Bq/mcub) but in very small amounts
All values have been taken from EURDEP site
eurdep.jrc.ec.europa.euQuelle:
enenews.comby Edano 11/12/2011 9:43:12 PM

drnovo = krsko
by Edano 11/12/2011 9:43:26 PM

The closest monitoring station to that plant in Slovenia is offline. Um oops.
www.radioaktivnost.siby lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:45:50 PM

it is just a rumor. so we stumbled across this fabulous map:
eurdepweb.jrc.ec.europa.euby Edano 11/12/2011 9:46:08 PM

Russian radiation network - built in flash so you can't translate but if you play graphically you can click on things and get readings.
www.russianatom.ruby lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:48:38 PM

@lillymunster you can track back through the link @Edano gave and it has been happening for a long time and readings in the area are >3 on some days
by elainekirk 11/12/2011 9:48:56 PM

Odd Slovenia's network shows mostly normal, the Euro one not so much
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:51:20 PM



the maps updated latest 131 readings
by elainekirk 11/12/2011 9:53:18 PM

Not finding anything out of the ordinary in Russias monitors
www.russianatom.ruby lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:53:51 PM

@elainekirk aha !
by Edano 11/12/2011 9:54:58 PM

Swiss rad network
www.naz.chby lillymunster 11/12/2011 9:58:31 PM

Fukushima plant opened to journalistsThe Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant has been opened to reporters for the first time since the accident occurred 8 months ago.
On Saturday, 36 reporters and cameramen from Tokyo and Fukushima and from other countries put on protective gear and full face masks, and accompanied nuclear crisis minister Goshi Hosono to the site of the accident.
They stayed on a bus during the one-hour tour that started around 11 AM to minimize exposure to radiation.
The crew saw reactor buildings that were severely damaged by hydrogen explosions and vehicles hit by the tsunami that remain on the site.
A facility to clean contaminated water and a number of tanks to store cleansed water have been set up, and rubble has been removed from roads.
However, the reporters could finally see first-hand the intensity of the explosions and the overwhelming power of the tsunami.
The head of the plant, Masao Yoshida, told the reporters that he had thought he would die several times during the week that followed the accident.
He said he had thought he would not survive when the No.1 and No.3 reactors exploded, and when his team was unable to inject water into the No.2 reactor.
Sunday, November 13, 2011 01:13 +0900 (JST)
www3.nhk.or.jp by Edano 11/12/2011 10:02:26 PM

@elainekirk I did your map but changed it to "latest data" rather than maximum. Those same two spots show up and are the only ones on the map.
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 10:02:33 PM

@lillymunster now go to t-gamma
by elainekirk 11/12/2011 10:03:12 PM

@elainekirk Using average values, the high spot is north and east of the plant
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 10:04:04 PM

it is gross nuke is not a path a country should be able to take without mandate from the global community because nuclides do not recognise borders
by elainekirk 11/12/2011 10:05:02 PM

@elainekirk that gives a pretty even distribution, seemed to take it over the mountains in Austria?
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 10:06:29 PM

@lillymunster they are not so high in this region.
by Edano 11/12/2011 10:07:42 PM

@all - if it is the Slovenian nuke plant why only I-131 is being found in all these reporting nations?
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 10:07:52 PM

@Edano right, mostly green, then blue past that heading towards the coasts.
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 10:08:20 PM

@MaryW pmsl that is a classic, brilliant!!
by elainekirk 11/12/2011 10:12:23 PM

@MaryW :) let's dig them out.
by Edano 11/12/2011 10:14:15 PM

LMAO!!!
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 10:14:59 PM

Using T-Gamma - 1 Month - Average Values - there is a red spot in the middle of Austria. Maybe a hot spot? I wouldn't think it a source if the winds are constant from the east and south in that area?
by lillymunster 11/12/2011 10:16:03 PM