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Legal updates Rocky Flats
Rocky Flats News Sasha Stiles Rocky Flats News Sasha Stiles

Legal updates Rocky Flats

The incurable cancer threat remains despite the recent anthropogenic geographical interstices of the Rocky Flats Superfund site: the current Rocky Flats Site (OU1), Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge (OU2), Jefferson Parkway (OU2), and offsite lands (OU3) where respirable - Plutonium Dioxide - dust remains.

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Soil contamination/Plutonium update 4/1/20 - Michael Ketterer
Rocky Flats News Sasha Stiles Rocky Flats News Sasha Stiles

Soil contamination/Plutonium update 4/1/20 - Michael Ketterer

Decades of studies have demonstrated that soils from the Rocky Flats National Wildlife Refuge and surroundings contain elevated levels of plutonium (239+240Pu). The plutonium originating from Rocky Flats is found in two distinct forms: a) plutonium that is dispersed relatively uniformly on the surfaces of all the soil particles, and b) “hot particles” of essentially pure plutonium dioxide.

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Important Review Paper: A Quick Look at Plutonium Contamination from Rocky Flats
Rocky Flats News LeRoy More Rocky Flats News LeRoy More

Important Review Paper: A Quick Look at Plutonium Contamination from Rocky Flats

The first of the two nuclear bombs used against Japan was a uranium bomb dropped on the city of Hiroshima. The second bomb, which destroyed Nagasaki, was a plutonium bomb. U.S. authorities soon realized that plutonium bombs weighed less but had a bigger explosion, so they decided that all future U.S. nuclear bombs would be made with plutonium. The Austin Company of Cleveland, Ohio, was given the task of selecting a site for this plutonium work. They chose a place called Rocky Flats, 16 miles northwest of downtown Denver.

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