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Japanese Reactor Radiation Detected On The Shores Of Vancouver Island But It's Not Dangerous: Expert

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2015 01:21 PM
    VICTORIA — Radiation from the leaking Fukushima nuclear reactor in Japan has been detected on the shores of Vancouver Island.
     
    Scientists say it's the first time since a tsunami in Japan four years ago that radiation has been found on the shorelines of North America.
     
    Low levels of the radioactive isotope Cesium-134 were collected last February in waters off a dock at Ucluelet, B.C., about 315 kilometres west of Victoria.
     
    University of Victoria chemical oceanographer Jay Cullen says that amount of radiation is minuscule and does not pose risks to human health or the ocean ecosystem.
     
    He says the radiation measurements found off Ucluelet are more than 1,000 times lower than Canadian drinking water standards for radiation levels.
     
    Scientists and citizen volunteers have been collecting water samples at more than 60 sites along the Canadian and U.S. west coasts and in Hawaii over the past 15 months looking for traces of radioactive isotopes from Japan.

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    Safety concerns rise in the wake of a CN train derailment in northern Ontario

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    Housing starts down in February: CMHC

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    B.C. sea cadet volunteer charged with child luring; RCMP seek potential victims

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    SURREY, B.C. — Members of two naval cadet programs in British Columbia are being asked to help police after a former program volunteer was charged with child luring. The RCMP issued a news release Friday that said Victor Overfield, 27, of North Vancouver was arrested last December. He was charged with one count of child luring and one count of sexual touching

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    Canadian pastor detained, charged in North Korea, Ottawa tells his family

    Canadian pastor detained, charged in North Korea, Ottawa tells his family
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