Paula Perry wrote:
Hi Deb.
I looked at that . They say "rad experiments" I believe that a rad is a unit of measurement for radiation. That must mean that they are experimenting with radiation. Unfortunately, I ask myself. How could they experiment without subject matter?
They can't.
If I am stupid I am sure someone will correct me. Radiation is what they call "nuclear medicine?"
Nuclear medicine uses radiation, but is NOT radiation. Light and X-rays are also radiation. Nuclear medicine uses what is termed ionizing radiation, which includes X-Rays, alpha, and gamma rays. I don't think they use beta rays.
It produces waste.
Not necessarily. Unless you are referring to the waste caused by energy production. Like the carbon dioxide waste produced by coal powered plants. Even that does not exist if produced by hydroelectric power.
At Ft. Belvoir they state "human radiation experiments". However, I wonder how you could experiment without radiation without humans.
Yes, that would require both radiation and humans. It is very ambiguous, it could be using something like cesium, or something like a laser or X-ray. Or it could be exposing humans to the radiation of outer space. Insufficient information.
When I was a baby I had three radiation treatments for an enlarged thymus. That is how I learned what a rad was, when the hospital was ordered to report it to me. It led to Thyroid problems and the removal of most of it.
Yes it is. The rad is a unit of energy absorbed from ionizing radiation, equal to 100 ergs per gram or 0.01 joules per kilogram of irradiated material.
Paula
    ----- Original Message -----
    *From:* Deborah Gerard <mailto:devorah...@yahoo.com>
    *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com <mailto:silver-list@eskimo.com>
    *Sent:* Friday, November 02, 2007 12:44 PM
    *Subject:* Re: CS>Nuclear Waste Task Force - Maps Links - Sierra Club

    *Wonder why so many VA Hospitals are listed?....deb*

    */Paula Perry <p...@zoomnet.net <mailto:p...@zoomnet.net>>/* wrote:

        You can go to this page. Click the link titled "Deadly Nuclear
        Radiation Hazards" to pull up a map of the US. If you click on
        any area of the map it will take you to a page that will list
        all the nuclear activity for the area.
There is a book, Fighting Radiation & Chemical Pollutants with
        foods, herbs, & vitamins, by Steven R. Schechter, N.D.
        Highly recommend the book. It has a map in it that got me
        interested.
        Paula

http://www.sierraclub.org/nuclearwaste/maps.asp

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