Static Copy of Live Discussion at http://www.scribblelive.com/Event/Japan_Earthquake5
Fukushima Daichi crisis - April 1 perspective by Barry Brook bravenewclimate.com i.treehugger.com

special cloth covers to filter radio-activity
farm6.static.flickr.com
@Jojo @Jojo just trying to provide background for discussion. External source upload.wikimedia.org Skin contamination upload.wikimedia.org One type of internal contamination upload.wikimedia.org
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I've tried to work my own understanding of the No. 3 reactor building into a graphic. The base for this rather large "map" are the released SDF videos from mach 15th and march 27th. i.imgur.com
@Jojo @Jojo just trying to provide background for discussion. External source upload.wikimedia.org Skin contamination upload.wikimedia.org One type of internal contamination upload.wikimedia.org
@Jojo @Jojo just trying to provide background for discussion. External source upload.wikimedia.org Skin contamination upload.wikimedia.org One type of internal contamination upload.wikimedia.org
some basics www.ndt-ed.org www.ndt-ed.org
About per body part exposures: www.ndt-ed.org www.ndt-ed.org

Diagram of the the Reactor/Turbine hall 2 trench and the high radio active water issue : i51.tinypic.com
@ marie rich it was posted here: plixi.com those are locations
Details of Plutonium meassurements at plixi.com
Map of where the plutonium samples were found : plixi.com
Posted by Katz on his chat stream "TEPCO: Where TEPCO sampled the soil that had plutonium ->http://plixi.com/p/87602186

oops thats the right one. www.zamg.ac.at
@Josh It appears that the only way for water to get into the turbine room would be if pipes were leaking. upload.wikimedia.org
@all www.wwyd.org (fallout map of chernobyl) Notice the distances, now compare that with the distance of Japan to the US. There is no way for the fuel to have an explosion like the one at chernobyl which blew while the reactor was fully active. We could still have an explosion, but there is no way for it to be even close to as powerful as that. I'm not saying this is better or worse then chernobyl, only saying that from an absolutely scientific point of view, it is impossible to scatter plutonium that far.
@Josh this? files.gereports.com
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@Josh I found this. media.tumblr.com
by Ralph Unger via Media.tumblr at 3/27/2011 7:32:44 PMdocument.write( LiveBlog.ConvertServerTimeToLocalTimeFriendlyString( "3/27/2011 7:32:44 PM" ) )Sunday, March 27, 2011 1:32:44 PM

@alblee You mean a chart that plots sieverts and their effects? In that case look here: twitpic.com and here xkcd.com
Here is BWR/6 image, it is not Fukushima but it is similar: farm3.static.flickr.com
Some Links to Sites with Current Information on the
Status of Nuclear Powerplants in Japan
EMAIL Comments to: brad@poudreinternetservice.com