News They're finally seeing the connection to Fukushima

Debi

Owner/Admin
Staff
Joined
Sep 16, 2013
Messages
241,977
Reaction score
235,174
Points
315
Location
South of Indy
http://www.realfarmacy.com/whales-die-pacific-ocean-scientists-suspect-fukushima/

dead-whale.jpg


Whales have been dropping like flies in the Gulf of Alaska. Approximately nine whale carcasses were sighted in late May and early June. Now, fisherman have spotted five more decomposing whales, a fin whale and four humpbacks to add to the death toll.

The first two whale deaths reported in May sparked a flurry of attention from government agencies, including the Marine Mammal Stranding Network, Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, NOAA, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.

No one knows what caused the death of the whales; however, scientists are narrowing in on the kernel of truth as they weed out possibilities. What scientists do know is that all the whales appear to have died around the same time.

The Gulf of Alaska waters have been warm lately. A working hypothesis was that the whales were dying from domoic acid, which is a toxin produced by warmth-induced algae blooms. This did not seem entirely implausible, since the whales share similar eating habits. Nevertheless, this hypothesis was ruled out after test results taken from a partially decomposing fin whale carcass came back negative.

Samples have only been taken from one whale carcass so far. Researchers are still awaiting the results on two others tests for paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP) and cesium-137.

“We do not have conclusive evidence to link their mortality to algal blooms but continue to sample water/plankton/shellfish with a network of folks statewide,” Kate Wynne, a marine mammal specialist investigating the whale deaths, told sources in an email. “Hopefully, by monitoring current conditions and tracking/recording carcasses, we will be quicker to note and respond to a future event if it happens.”

The mainstream media has cited a rise in ocean temperatures and acidity as possible causes of the whale deaths while ignoring the presence of cesium-137, a radioactive isotope with a 30-year half-life released from Fukushima.

To learn more about how radiation from the Fukushima nuclear power plant could be affecting the Pacific Ocean, continue reading at FukushimaWatch.com.
 
Sorry, but the information offered in the article does not add up. Confirming that these whales died as a result of radiation poisoning shouldn't take very much, and if the supposed scientists studying the carcasses were able to run toxicology samples, they would have been able to run tests for radiation just as easily. If the animals were indeed swimming offshore when the nuclear plant was leaking into the Pacific it's entirely plausible they received a lethal dosage, but this article is chalk full of contradictions.
 
Its actually a relief if in fact they died of something OTHER than radiation
 
  • Like
Reactions: surge