I'm not seeing anything on USGS
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsww/
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsww/
I'm not seeing anything on USGS
http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsww/
Click on this link it's live coverage.
http://edition.cnn.com/video/flashLive/live.html?stream=stream3&hpt=T1
From the link:http://www.infowars.com/alert-fukushima-coverup-40-years-of-spent-nuclear-rods-blown-sky-high/
Excerpt:
The Fukushima Daiichi plant has seven pools dedicated to spent fuel rods. These are located at the top of six reactor buildings – or were until explosions and fires ravaged the plant. On the ground level there is a common pool in a separate building that was critical damaged by the tsunami. Each reactor building pool holds 3,450 fuel rod assemblies and the common pool holds 6,291 fuel rod assemblies. Each assembly holds sixty-three fuel rods. In short, the Fukushima Daiichi plant contains over 600,000 spent fuel rods – a massive amount of radiation that will soon be released into the atmosphere.
Tell me this isn't true...
They just said Monday!![]()
And again tonight - I would love to be a cockroach in the war room of the USS Ronald Reagan tonight. I bet our commander in chief has been on the phone and knows. :furious:
Plus, now earlier how peeples online tablet order was cancelled because a hospital bought everything they had.
I want info! I won't panic I promise. I just want to know WTH is going on!!!!!
Does anyone remember when the actress Susan Hayward was filming the movie Conqueror in Utah in 1956? Everyone was exposed to radiation due to the government doing nuclear testing. She and others got cancer years later. She died in 1976 suffering from multiple cancers. I remember when reading about her story that the wind was blowing the sand so bad during the filming, probably thats how they got exposed to it because it was 100 miles away.
Praying for everyone.
I cannot believe CNN is not live.
I was told this is reactor #4-- anyone read Japanese?
http://www.yomiuri.co.jp/zoom/20110316-OYT9I00485.htm
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant No. 4 (middle) and No. 3 (front) (photo 15 provides TEPCO)
IF (and that is a HUGE IF) the workers have "left the building" and no one is manning or maintaining operations at this plant - how long before something really big happens? I don't think it would be too long - the reactors are in dire straits now and without maintaining anything - they could go rather quick - at least I would think.
The guy on MSNBC is really good right now - explaining the hydrogen explosions and how they happeneds.
Do you read Japanese?