This is coolbert:
Sixty years later the chickens do come home to roost.
From the Internet web site "Strange Sounds" courtesy Jack.
"Radioactive Sahara sand rains on Europe"
"You remember [?] the Sahara sand that covered Europe on February 6, 2021? It was eerie, even in Switzerland where I live." [dust from a wind-storm over the Sahara turned the sky red in portions of Europe]
"Well it turns out it carried traces of French nuclear tests in the Sahara in the early 1960s in form of Cesium-[1]37."
"Dust sampled in Haut-Doubs was analyzed by the ACRO laboratory and scientists clearly determined the presence of Cesium-137, an artificial radio-active element resulting from the nuclear fission during a nuclear explosion."
"The trace amount of Cesium-137 that fell (80,000 Bq per km2) isn’t dangerous for our health. But still the dust cloud has spilled old traces of cesium-137 wherever it has passed in France and in the nearby countries."
THAT CESIUM-137 ALREADY HAVING GONE THROUGH TWO HALF-LIFE CYCLES OF THIRTY YEARS AND NOW ONLY [?] 25 % RADIOACTIVE POTENT AS WAS THE ORIGINAL IN 1960.
In passing let me also mention that the number one rated location in the USA as considered most suitable for retirement, St. George UTAH "dusted" over one-hundred times by radioactive fallout from nuclear detonation at the Nevada atomic weapons test site.
We are good to go, are we?
coolbert.
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