Fukushima

bluntmassa1

Well-Known Member
I wonder how much of that is seeping into Cali's herb
well considering the size of the pacific I'm going to go with half a teaspoon per 1,000 gallons of ocean water conspiracy nuts are just nuts I remember they were saying it was going to kill the ocean. lol, I think we got more to worry about all the smog coming down on them Calli plants but it's still good smoke. :bigjoint:
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
well considering the size of the pacific I'm going to go with half a teaspoon per 1,000 gallons of ocean water conspiracy nuts are just nuts I remember they were saying it was going to kill the ocean. lol, I think we got more to worry about all the smog coming down on them Calli plants but it's still good smoke. :bigjoint:
Mmmmm gotta love that AUTHENTIC smoky diesel flavor. Yum!
 

WeedFreak78

Well-Known Member
well considering the size of the pacific I'm going to go with half a teaspoon per 1,000 gallons of ocean water conspiracy nuts are just nuts I remember they were saying it was going to kill the ocean. lol, I think we got more to worry about all the smog coming down on them Calli plants but it's still good smoke. :bigjoint:
Just like the gulf oil spill was going to wipe out the Atlantic ocean. The thing is, it is a possibility, just a extremely unlikely one. Either one of those events had the potential to cause huge environmental impacts if every single factor was aligned perfectly. The locally high radiation levels in the water could have sterilized a large population of young fish if it was during spawning season significantly reducing school numbers in following years, large blooms of plankton could have been killed off causing a food web collapse, etc. leading to the chain reaction people feared. I believe it was either Discovery or the Science channel had a special about it pretty much saying - ya, it could happen..but it's not going to..
 

ttystikk

Well-Known Member
Just like the gulf oil spill was going to wipe out the Atlantic ocean. The thing is, it is a possibility, just a extremely unlikely one. Either one of those events had the potential to cause huge environmental impacts if every single factor was aligned perfectly. The locally high radiation levels in the water could have sterilized a large population of young fish if it was during spawning season significantly reducing school numbers in following years, large blooms of plankton could have been killed off causing a food web collapse, etc. leading to the chain reaction people feared. I believe it was either Discovery or the Science channel had a special about it pretty much saying - ya, it could happen..but it's not going to..
What's much more likely to happen is that the incidence of rare cancers will increase to where they're not so rare anymore. Thyroid cancer is one, for example.
 
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