9
   

WE MUST PREVENT , A HELIUM 3 GAP

 
 
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Nov, 2009 07:51 am
@dlowan,
after me, en francais

Ye "fartsky" w twoim kierumku
0 Replies
 
dyslexia
 
  2  
Reply Mon 23 Nov, 2009 08:06 am
@farmerman,
Helium makes to talk funny.
0 Replies
 
DrewDad
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Nov, 2009 08:24 am
Helium3 on Discovery
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Nov, 2009 01:13 pm
@DrewDad,
You think its funny. Im really concerned.
0 Replies
 
Butrflynet
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Nov, 2009 01:22 pm
Would you find the He3 at sites like this in New Mexico? If so, in a few years all we'll need to do is collect the pee and blood from New Mexicans and mine the He3 from that.

http://www.upi.com/Science_News/2009/11/01/Los-Alamos-waste-moves-toward-aquifers/UPI-17941257120991/

Quote:
Los Alamos waste moves toward aquifers
Published: Nov. 1, 2009 at 7:16 PM

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Nov. 1 (UPI) -- Toxic waste from New Mexico's Los Alamos National Laboratory is trickling toward the state's underground water aquifers, officials say.

The deadly waste is leaking from underground burial sites used to store the radioactive waste generated by the building of nuclear bombs, with some of it reaching to within several hundred feet of the edge of the Rio Grande River, one of the most important water sources in the Southwest United States, the Los Angeles Times reported Sunday.

Monitoring sites set up by the New Mexico Environment Department have detected organic compounds such as perchlorate, which is used in rocket propellant, as well as the radioactive byproducts of nuclear fission, the newspaper said.

Although the levels of contamination found aren't high enough to trigger health warnings, state officials say no one knows how the waste is slipping through scrambled layers of rock on the 40-square-mile Los Alamos complex.

Laboratory officials told the Times the waste isn't jeopardizing anyone's health.

"We are seeing no human or ecological risk," Danny Katzman, director of the lab's water stewardship program, told the newspaper.
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Nov, 2009 01:32 pm
@Butrflynet,
HA--"Were from the government, you have nothing to fear".

My guys did a perchlorate cleanup years ago at the Aerojet General site near Sacramento. If you allowed the perchlorate to separate by airspraying and evapo, you could actually make a batch of stuff that would go !!!BANG!!!! right under your feet.
Wed make a precis and paint it on the trailer doorways on a Friday early PM in summer and itd dry all weekend (NOBODY in CAL works on A friday afternoon and weekends in summer)). When thge lab techs 'd come in on Mon AM, they only had to shuffle across the door jamb and itd shoot off like a small cap. We got yelled at by Aerojets safety people (they had only rudimentary knowledge of chemistry and were jealous that we could create fire without instruction manuals)


ANYWAY, My idea was to actually contact the provisonary rulers at the uranium mill sites or the FUSRAP sites and see if they wanted to set up H3 pumping sites to collect the He3 by centriguge.
0 Replies
 
 

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