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The Military Science

France Grossly Underestimated Radioactive Fallout From Atom Bomb Tests, Study Finds (sciencemag.org) 77

Adrian Cho writes via Science Magazine: From 1966 to 1974, France blew up 41 nuclear weapons in above-ground tests in French Polynesia, the collection of 118 islands and atolls that is part of France. The French government has long contended that the testing was done safely. But a new analysis of hundreds of documents declassified in 2013 suggests the tests exposed 90% of the 125,000 people living in French Polynesia to radioactive fallout -- roughly 10 times as many people as the French government has estimated.

The findings come from a 2-year collaboration, dubbed the Moruroa Files, between Disclose, a French nonprofit that supports investigative journalism; Interprt, a collective of researchers, architects, and spatial designers affiliated with the Norwegian University of Science and Technology who focus on environmental issues; and the Science & Global Security program at Princeton. The findings were presented on 9 March on the project's website, in a book, and in a technical paper posted to the arXiv preprint server. Most French Polynesians were exposed to a relatively small amount of radiation, and the central issue is who is eligible for compensation under French law.

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France Grossly Underestimated Radioactive Fallout From Atom Bomb Tests, Study Finds

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  • More details (Score:4, Informative)

    by enriquevagu ( 1026480 ) on Saturday March 13, 2021 @02:38AM (#61153286)
    • Re:More details (Score:5, Insightful)

      by quenda ( 644621 ) on Saturday March 13, 2021 @03:27AM (#61153340)

      Quick summary: the numbers above refer to how many people were exposed to over 1 millisieverts.
      And 11,000 were exposed to 5mSv.

      However "Epidemiological studies suggest that the lowest dose value of ionizing radiation at which good evidence of increased cancer risks in human exists is 10–50 mSv for an acute exposure."

      So as far as I can tell, there is no evidence that any harm was done by the fallout. Still, they did make an error and cover it up.

      • So as far as I can tell, there is no evidence that any harm was done by the fallout.

        To prove it is safe, the French should detonate an identical device in Centre-Val de Loire.

        Or is it only safe for brown people on the other side of the world?

        • by Anonymous Coward
          You have less "brown" people in Centre-Val de Loire?
        • by quenda ( 644621 )

          To prove it is safe, the French should detonate an identical device in Centre-Val de Loire.

          Or is it only safe for brown people on the other side of the world?

          Are you geographically challenged? Mururoa is 1200km from Tahiti. Centre-Val de Loire is closer to Algeria than that!
          The Trinity test site in Nevada is 100 miles from Albuquerque (French name?) .
          The Maralinga test site in Australia was only 800km from a major city, and much closer to smaller cities.

          Not to mention the millions of brown people in metropolitan France.
          So please put away your virtue-signalling race card.

          • The Trinity test site is in Alamogordo, NM. Albuquerque is named after a town in the province of Badajoz in Spain.
        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          Not one of your brighter comments. What does any of this have to do with your perceived racism? Clue: Nothing

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The issue here is that the law allows anyone who likely received 1mSv or more to claim compensation. Regardless of if you think 1mSv is too low to matter, the fact is that those people were exposed to radioactive fallout without their consent.

        Also it's 11,000 people exposed to at least 5mSv, they could have got higher doses. Because it is impossible to prove that a particular cancer resulted from a particular exposure event, or to account for cumulative effects, the previous law which rejected most claims w

        • People will always stoop low when there are benefits to collect from the government.

          Doesn't matter whether there are real risks, all that matter is that we get a free extra shekels.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            I wouldn't call being compensated for being exposed to nuclear fallout a "benefit". Especially at the time when little was known of the effects of the exposure. Imagine decades of worry. Not knowing where the hot-spots were, or if you were going to get cancer in later life.

            And of course, some number did get cancer as a result. Impossible to prove which ones.

            • And of course, some number did get cancer as a result. Impossible to prove which ones.

              You probably remember John Wayne, he did to cancer after making a movie in a radiated american desert, no idea if it was Nevada or Arizona or something.

              The following years the whole crew of that movie involved during that particular filming died.

          • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            Oh, and by the way, I would advise against the use of "shekels". It tends to be associated with anti-semitism, which I'm sure was not your intent.

            • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

              Did anyone give a shit until Eric Trump said it about Bob Woodward? And then, suddenly it was TDS all over the place, and must be anti-Semitic I spent a couple minutes googling and could find no earlier reference to such a thing.

              • Did anyone give a shit until Eric Trump said it about Bob Woodward?

                Yes we did.

                Signed, a Jew.

                And then, suddenly it was TDS [...]

                Fuck off.

                • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

                  Yes we did.

                  Signed, a Jew.

                  Backed by a total lack of evidence.

                  Fuck off.

                  Still suffering I see. BTW, I thought he never belonged in office and didn't vote for him, but you clearly have issues beyond that.

                  • Backed by a total lack of evidence.

                    Welp, found the racist.

                    Sure you don't think of yourself as racist, but you will always deny reality to people on the receiving end. Unless you personally witness racism happening egregiously, directly in front of you, plus with the signed testimony of two witnesses you will flat out deny it happens. You act to perpetuate racism, and that makes you racist.

                    Still suffering I see.

                    Ah yes, being a victim of anti-Semitism is being anti Trump. You are insane. and racist.

                    • Welp, found the racist.

                      Anybody can accuse anybody else of anything, any time.

                      Besides, who (apart from Nazis) thinks of Jewish people as a "race"? Judaism is a religion.
                      Anybody can join, and anybody can drop out.

                      And by the way, the shekel is the official currency of Israel and has nothing to do with antisemitism.

                    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • Most people so low on income and poverty and in that situation do not even know that there is some "benefits to collect from the government" ... idiot.

          • People will always stoop low when there are benefits to collect from the government.

            The whole point of a benefit is to get something out of it. Besides, it's the people's money. They're just getting back what they paid.

            Doesn't matter whether there are real risks, all that matter is that we get a free extra shekels.

            It's not free if it's your own money being returned to you.

        • by dcw3 ( 649211 )

          Well, that radiation spread out over the globe, so where do you draw the line? Shouldn't we all be compensated? I want my reparations!

      • Still, they did make an error and cover it up.

        "Ribbit."

      • Perhaps you want to reread what you just wrote, and the moderators should get a clue.
        Perhaps you have a problem grasping what the difference is between a "1 millisieverts" and "0â"50 mSv" is, so reread it and grasp it.

      • And, there is ample evidence that sub-harmful doses actually improve health. Virii, bacteria, etc. all have to reproduce rapidly in order to claim a toehold in a hostile environment -- kinda like the D-day invasion. Ionizing radiation (if it is penetrative -- alpha doesn't count) preferentially kills off rapidly dividing/growing cells. That is why it is really bad for newly pregnant women -- even with embryos deep within their bodies that penetrative ionizing rads distort the embryos. It can do other da
  • They lied about it.
    Just like they lied after they murdered that Dutch photographer in the Rainbow Warrior.
  • Someone underestimated the originality of this story... duplicate from earlier except this one claims an extra 15k victims...
  • Well, the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partial_Nuclear_Test_Ban_Treaty) were signed in August 1963 by no less than 126 countries, but France (and China, and North Korea) were not among them, and has, AFAIK, still not done so.

  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Saturday March 13, 2021 @04:00AM (#61153384)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • They sure didn't expect all the blowback from murdering a couple of people when they blew up Greenpeace's boat, did they?

      I assume by "blowback," you mean "nothing of real consequence."

  • by omfglearntoplay ( 1163771 ) on Saturday March 13, 2021 @06:03AM (#61153554)

    Call out these people who would poison the world. Call them out and make them atone. Negligence, death, and cruelty all for what?

  • yawn...more fear (Score:5, Informative)

    by drwho ( 4190 ) on Saturday March 13, 2021 @06:38AM (#61153592) Homepage Journal

    Even if true, probably not dangerous. You can find the XKCD chart for yourselves

  • It was a bad idea to build a Club Med on top?

  • I assume the summary means a french colony?

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