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Current 10 sievert per hour reading at Fukushima?

Jim Stone

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Sept.21, 2013

Slip up confirms that there is still solid reactor fuel laying around

ENE news just screwed up by citing the WRONG NHK report. It is ENE’s job to bury the fact that reactor 3 was destroyed with a nuclear weapon, and they blew it big time. ENE NEWS HAS FINALLY AT LEAST PARROT REPORTED A REAL RADIATION READING FROM FUKUSHIMA. 10 sieverts per hour GAMMA. Not alpha, not beta, GAMMA, OUTSIDE, near one of the hard vent stacks. They are still in damage control mode, because they are not saying what the pipe is – A HARD VENT STACK THAT MADE THE “HYDROGEN EXPLOSIONS” IMPOSSIBLE. 10 sieverts per hour means there is still solid fuel from the reactor core laying around that the remote controlled cleaners and robots could not get to. This lays bare the fraud of the official story, which is still a little steam and three melt downs. This reading is out in the open, by one of the hard vent stacks.

10 sieverts per hour means that the area that is in the debris field for the reactor 3 explosion REMAIN ALMOST INSTANTLY FATAL, driving through would give you a lethal dose and you can forget about walking through. I always reported, right from the beginning that the debris field for reactor 3 had to be handled via remote control and robots, because people could not enter the area and this latest report from ENE confirms this had to be the case. And if they spotted cracks in the base of the stack, where the reading is 10 sieverts, it was done via a remote controlled camera because no one would have survived finding the cracks by walking around.

This confirms reactor 3′s core expulsion. There is no disaster of any sort short of a core expulsion that could ever hit an out door GAMMA radiation level this high, other than having the core get ejected. Even a radiation reading 100,000 times less this late in the game would mean hard material got expelled. I have said this all along, and now we have proof that the cleanup failed and there is still solid reactor fuel laying around.

This makes a laughing stock of former ENE stories, which spoke about comparatively harmless beta and alpha readings from water tanks, a scenario at least tenuously plausible with the official story.

The reason why the base of the stack has a reading this high is because they could not get the cleanup machines into the area around the base of the stack. You would have to go in there with a broom and hand sweep it, and anyone who tried would be dead before they got the dust pan. And this is not an error – if the reading was 10 millisieverts an hour and there was an emergency, people would most certainly go in on limited exposure shifts and fix this, and even a 10 millisievert an hour reading, which is 1/1000th of the actual reading would mean there was at least dust from a reactor pressure vessel breach and total inner containment loss. 10 millisieverts an hour would kill you in a little over a week. Acceptable millisievert exposure levels are measured in years, not hours and the fact that the actual reading is yet again well over 1000 times higher than what would kill you in a week means beyond all doubt there is no way Fukushima happened even as a worst case non-military disaster scenario. The guts of reactor 3 were ejected with explosives.

UPDATE: 10 SIEVERTS AN HOUR CONFIRMED BY NHK, and NHK has implied that the radiation is in the entire surrounding area, not just the base of the stack.

I don’t think people understand how huge the reactors were at Fukushima. The following photo is of a smaller reactor than unit 3 being built, this one is identical to unit 1, the smallest Fuku reactor and this is why it would take a nuclear weapon to expel the core:

For a complete explanation of why the area around the hard vent stack is inaccessible, SEE THE FOLLOWING PICTURE OF REACTOR 3.

A version of this article was first published on jimstonefreelance.com.

http://piotrbein.wordpress.com/2013/09/21/jim-stone-current-10-sievert-per-hour-reading-at-fukushima/