Quote:
Originally Posted by theaustinescorts
The risk is that enough isotopes of a particular kind will migrate which will find their way into some poor soul's lettuce salad, or inhaled in his lungs, and that's all it will take for that guy.
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Assume there's a 1 in 10 million chance that you'll die from the increased amount of radioactive iodine vapor in the air. That's 30 people dead in the US.
Now assume there's a 1 in 10 million chance that a particle of plutonium will somehow drift 10,000 miles from the source, and land on a lettuce in California that you're going to eat some day. That's still 30 people dead in the US.
Do you think the dead people or their relatives care whether it was a particle or gas?
This kind of drifting particle is taken into consideration in the calculations.
Now, if someone is shipping us contaminated lettuce or other food from the fallout area near Japan, that could be a big deal.
I'm not saying no one here in the US will die from the Japanese reactor accident. I'm just saying that the risk for us as individuals in the US is a drop in the bucket compared to our other risks.
By the way, luckily, radioactive iodine has a half life of 8 days or so, so at least it won't hang around for a long time as long as it stops spewing from the reactor site. Some of the other nasty stuff is more persistent.