efiste2 said:
If it takes a tiny amount of Plutonium or Uranium to create such a powerfull weapon, chain reaction, how come the radiation from that weapon is so strong and longlasting.
when millions of tons lay in the earth, why is that not as potent and deadly...?
U235 exists naturally in the earth. Plutonium does not.
It is not really true that the radiation from a nuclear explosion or reactor waste is long-lasting -- at least, not compared to the 235U, which has a half-life of almost a billion years. One of the reasons why natural 235U in the Earth doesn't cause any detectable harm is that its half-life is so long. Because of the long half-life, its rate of decay is extremely low. You can hold a small nuclear reactor fuel rod in your bare palm, and not much will happen to you.
Once a fission chain reaction occurs, you're dealing with a witch's brew of lighter isotopes, some of which have short half-lives and some of which have longer ones. The very short-lived ones have half-lives of seconds or minutes, so they don't present any long-term threat. The ones with the longest half-lives have low decay rates, so they also don't do much harm. The harmful ones are the ones with intermediate half-lives of weeks to years.
After waiting, say, a decade for the relatively short-lived half-lives in nuclear reactor waste to die down, we actually could process it into a fine powder or a solution or suspension, and then simply take it out on boats and mix it as uniformly as possible into the world's oceans. The volume of the oceans is vast, so the resulting levels of radiation exposure turn out to be too low to harm marine life or humans. However, this technique is not politically possible for emotional reasons.
A secondary reason why fallout and commercial waste are more harmful than the naturally occurring fissionables, at equal concentration, is that the naturally occurring stuff mostly emits alpha particles, which are blocked by any tiny amount of material. Unless you ingest an alpha source, or get it in an open cut or something, it can't hurt you. The fission products, however, can emit a lot of betas or gammas, which are far more penetrating. Also, a nuclear bomb or a disaster like Chernobyl disperses material into the air and water, where it can easily be ingested.
To keep things in perspective, Chernobyl is a very healthy wildlife habitat now that the humans are gone, and zero people died from radiation exposure at Fukushima (although many died from the tsunami).