| U.S. RADIATION LEVELS SOAR 20 TIMES FROM  JAPAN FALLOUT - IDAHO HIGHEST, 100 TIMES ABOVE NORMAL Latest EPA Air, Water Data  Comparable to Chernobyl Fallout, Chinese A-Bomb Tests
 April 7, 2011 – Iodine-131 in  U.S. air and precipitation in late March was 20 times greater than normal, due  to radiation releases from the meltdowns at Japanese nuclear reactors,  according to EPA data. The highest figures recorded thus  far are in Idaho, where an air sample in Boise was 84 times above normal, and a  precipitation sample in Boise was 121 times above normal.  The highest concentrations in the nation are  on the West Coast, Alaska, and Hawaii. “We can’t assume this radiation  is harmless, and must conduct studies to assess any health risks, especially to  American infants, and children,” says Joseph Mangano MPH MBA, Executive  Director of the Radiation and Public Health Project research group. Since the earthquake and tsunami  in Japan on March 11 caused meltdowns at multiple nuclear reactors at  Fukushima, the EPA has been collecting data from its system of 124 radiation  monitoring sites throughout the country.   I-131 results are as follows: AIR SAMPLESFrom March 18-24, the EPA took 73  air samples at 17 sites, and detected I-131 in 66 of them.  A comparison with historical EPA data showed:
 
                    The current U.S. median of 0.198 picocuries of       I-131 per cubic meter of air was at least 20 times above “normal” levels       (0.010) recorded by EPA in early June 1986 when Chernobyl fallout had       largely disappeared from the U.S. environment. 
                    Current levels were 46% of peak Chernobyl fallout (0.430, May 11-13, 1986). 
                    Boise ID had a reading 84 times above the normal       level in the U.S. on March 23 (0.840, vs. 0.010). PRECIPITATION SAMPLESFrom March 15-21, the EPA took 13  precipitation samples, but did not detect I-131 in any.  But from March 22-25, each of 12 samples at  10 sites had detectable levels:
 
                    The current U.S. median of 39.6 picocuries of       I-131 per liter of precipitation was 20 times above normal levels (2.0)       recorded in early May 1986, before Chernobyl fallout arrived. 
                    Current levels were 40% of peak Chernobyl fallout (99.5, May 14-16, 1986). 
                    Boise ID had a reading 121 times above the normal       level in the U.S. on March 22 (242, vs.2.0) 
                    Riverside CA, near San Francisco, had a reading       69 times above the normal level in the U.S. (138 on March 22)  
                    Current levels were 52% of the levels in October       1976, after fallout from a large-scale Chinese above-ground atom bomb test       reached the U.S. (75.5) I-131 is a fast-decaying  radioactive chemical (half life of 8 days) found only in nuclear weapons  explosions and reactor operations.  When  ingested, it seeks out the thyroid gland, where it kills and injures healthy  cells, leading to thyroid cancer and other disorders affecting the organ.  I-131 is one of hundreds of radioactive  chemicals in reactors, including Strontium-90, Cesium-137, and Plutonium-239.  The EPA is tracking several of these  chemicals. To access EPA air and precipitation  data, the following web sites can be consulted: Air:  http://www.epa.gov/japan2011/docs/rert/radnet-air-final.pdfPrecipitation: http://www.epa.gov/japan2011/docs/rert/radnet-precipitation-final.pdf
 RPHP is a New York-based group of  scientists and health professionals who study health hazards of radiation  exposure.  Its members have published 27  medical journal articles and 7 books on the topic. ATTACHMENT
 EPA Samples of Air and  PrecipitationMarch 2011 vs. Historical Data
 Air Samples 
                    
                      | Dates | Event | Samples/ Sites
 |   Iodine-131Median  High
 |  
                      | March  18-25, 2011 | Japanese fallout | 66 17 | 0.198    
                       0.840 (Boise ID) |  
                      | May  11-13, 1986 | Chernobyl peak | 32 23 | 0.430    
                       1.600  (Boise/Phoenix AZ) |  
                      | June  1-10, 1986 | End of Chernobyl | 44 30 | 0.010    0.064 (Lansing MI)   - “normal levels” |  All  figures are in picocuries of Iodine-131 per cubic meter of airSources: http://www.epa.gov/japan2011/docs/rert/radnet-air-final.pdf,  and Environmental Radiation Data, Volume 46 (April-June 1986).
 Precipitation Samples
 
                    
                      | Dates | Event | Samples/ Sites
 |   Iodine-131Median  High
 |  
                      | March  15-21, 2011 | Japanese fallout | 13 11 | -----              All Not Detectable |  
                      | March 22-25, 2011 | Japanese fallout | 12 10 | 39.6      242 (Boise ID) |  
                      | May  1-3, 1986 | Before Chernobyll | 9   7 |   2.0         5 (Idaho City ID) – “normal levels” |  
                      | May  14-16, 1986 | Chernobyl peak | 46 36 | 99.5    3230 (Cheyenne WY) |  
                      | May  27-30, 1986 | End of Chernobyl | 20 18 | 25.5       80 (Concord NH) |  
                      | Oct.  4-29, 1976 | After Chinese test | 26 11 | 75.5     456  (Montgomery AL) |    Note:  Three samples from May 1-3, 1986 were negative numbers, and assumed to be 0.All  figures are in picocuries of Iodine-131 per liter of precipitation
 Sources: http://www.epa.gov/japan2011/docs/rert/radnet-precipitation-final.pdf,  and Environmental Radiation Data, Report 8 (April 1977) and Volume 46  (April-June 1986).
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