Testing was NOT scientific testing done by the Japanese government, or by NGO groups. It was done for purely business reasons by fishing groups. Now that there is little chance for public acceptance of fish caught anywhere off of the entirety of Fukushima Prefecture, the fishing groups decided...
Why? They have been "test fishing" since June of last year, and the fish they have caught have had cesium levels far below the safety levels 100 Bq/kg. With the current news about leaking contaminated water, they foresee no market acceptance for any fish caught in waters offshore Fukushima...
Poor translation. It should be something like, "since we can't rule out the possibility a fission reaction had occurred." Literally, "it is not possible to deny the possibility that a fission reaction had occurred."
The translation in their English .pdf makes it seem that they have...
And what is death due to lack of medication? And does dehydration at any level lead to stroke? The quoted article does *not* imply that these people died due only to lack of fluid intake. The article, not me, only suggests that this was one contributing cause. As does tsutsuji in his/her...
They did not "die of dehydration". The article states that tap water was unavailable, and that an insufficient fluid intake, coupled with insufficient medicine available to treat the illnesses that the 72 to 93 year old people had (including 7 who were bedridden due to dementia and/or other...
The article is available online here:
http://www.tokyo-np.co.jp/article/feature/nucerror/list/CK2011060602100004.html
Analysis done by the "Institute of Applied Energy" (http://www.iae.or.jp/)