woodburner wrote:stevecook172001 wrote:I want to know precisely ........... .
Do some
leg work
The question I was asking was related to the specific dispersal and accumulation rates in this particular case as reported as they related to the veracity of the implication that this accumulation represented a significantly higher risk to people than was the previously thought to be the case. That may or may not be the case. However, whether it is or not is entirely dependant on the objective initial and later re-calculated amounts in the environment read in conjunction with cancer rates and nothing in the piece allows that judgement to be made. Furthermore, nothing in the subsequent link you have given allows it to be made either. It simply goes into greater detail about the rate of physical clearance from the environment. But does not indicate how this has affected cancer rates which is, of course, what this is all about, right? Where is does at least
touch on how this may increase actual risk to humans, it actually states that the risk is minimal. The single example given being hill walkers. In what way does this paper you have linked to any further support the implication that the the risk to humans is significantly elevated due to slower clearance from the environment that was previously thought to be the case? Of, if you are not trying to imply the above, then of what relevance is your mentioning of it.
You are aware, are you not, apart from the few unfortunate individuals who died as a direct result of working on the reactor and immediate vicinity of it in the period immediately following the accident, the overall rates of cancer in Europe have not increased in any significant amounts and the rates of
death by cancer (or any other type of death that may be attributable to the Chernobyl accident) have not risen over and above background, pre-accident, levels even to the point where they could be distinguished from statistical noise? That's a convoluted way of saying that the death by cancer rates have, for all practical purposes, not risen at
all, by the way.