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Radioactive rabbit trapped at Hanford

Radioactive rabbit trapped at Hanford

Credit: KING

Hanford Nuclear Reservation

by Associated Press

KING5.com

Posted on November 5, 2010 at 7:00 AM

Updated Friday, Nov 5 at 2:04 PM

TRI-CITIES, Wash. -  A radioactive rabbit was trapped on the Hanford nuclear reservation, but there is no sign any people were exposed to the animal.

Washington state Health Department workers with the Office of Radiation Protection have been searching for contaminated rabbit droppings. None have been found in areas accessible to the public, regional director Earl Fordham said Thursday.

Officials suspect the rabbit sipped some water left from the recent demolition of a Cold War-era building used in the production of nuclear weapons,  The Tri-City Herald reported Friday.

Contaminated animals occasionally are found at the nuclear reservation, but more often they are in the center of Hanford, far from town.

The rabbit trapped at the 300 Area caught the Health Department's attention because it was close enough to the site's boundaries to potentially come in contact with people -- if it had been caught by a dog or if its droppings were deposited in an area open to the public.

Workers first found contaminated rabbit droppings last week in the 300 Area, said Todd Nelson, spokesman for Washington Closure Hanford, the Department of Energy contractor cleaning up Hanford.

Several rabbits were trapped and the one was found to be highly contaminated with radioactive cesium. It was killed and disposed as radioactive waste, he said Friday. Routine monitoring for radioactive droppings continues.

Washington Closure has narrowed the area of possible contamination to the 327 Building. It was used during the Cold War for testing highly radioactive materials, particularly fuel elements and cladding that were irradiated at Hanford reactors as part of plutonium production for the nation's nuclear weapons program.

The aboveground hot cells were pulled out of the building and demolition began on the structure about a month ago. One theory is that the rabbit might have been sipping water that collected in the building's basement after water was sprayed during demolition to suppress dust.

Washington Closure has taken steps to keep other animals from getting near the building. Workers have put up a chain-link fence and removed any vegetation that might provide a rabbit snack.

They also scented the perimeter of the building with fox urine to deter animals that might burrow. Gravel and steel plates have been used to cover places that have been identified as potential sources of the contamination.

Hanford has an extensive program to check for contaminated animals. In 2009, 33 contaminated animals or animal materials such as droppings were found on the site, the Tri-City Herald reported.

In Hanford's earlier years, contaminated animals were more common.

Liquid waste with radioactive salts was discharged into the ground near central Hanford during the Cold War. Rabbits and other animals were attracted to the salts and spread radioactive droppings across as much as 13.7 square miles of sage-covered land before the waste sites were sealed to keep out animals in 1969.

Federal economic stimulus money has been used to survey for the radioactive hot spots that remain four decades later.

In a more recent case, so many radioactive wasp nests were found spread across six acres by H Reactor in northern Hanford that up to a foot of soil was dug up to remove the nests.

The nests were built by mud dauber wasps in 2003. Water was sprayed to control dust during demolition of a basin attached to the reactor, and the mud created was collected by the wasps to build nests under straw that had been spread nearby to protect newly planted sagebrush seedlings.

There have been a couple of cases in the past two decades of contaminated animals in areas where they potentially could come in contact with the public.

In 1996, a contaminated mouse apparently crawled into a box of food collected by an employee food drive in central Hanford. It was trapped and tested in an abandoned Hanford building previously used by the Tri-Cities Food Bank.

Two years later, gnats and flies were suspected of eating a sugary coating used to fix some radioactive contamination. They then spread the contamination to waste left by workers in offices, such as banana peels and apple cores.

That required 35 tons of trash that could contain the office waste to be dug up from the Richland landfill and returned to Hanford.


 

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Comments: Displaying 1 - 15 of 18

yessir said on November 6, 2010 at 2:33 PM

rnl... you really deserve some sort of prize for "wadioactive wabbits"

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yoda4 said on November 6, 2010 at 9:24 AM

what a scary story. I feel for the animals, they don't have a clue! we really do live in a toxic wold.

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boobiewah said on November 6, 2010 at 9:14 AM

THANK GOD they have caught the evil, diabolical Radioactive Wabbit!!

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craig_holmes17 said on November 5, 2010 at 8:24 PM

I work at Hanford and you wouldnt believe the nonsense that goes on there. WCH gets paid top dollar to watch us work. sit in their vehicles all day long making sure were doing the right thing the right way, and we also have another company come in and inspect our work to make sure its right so therefor why does WCH have to babysit? My friend works at the Hanford fire dept and he was telling me that one persons job was to go around testing tumble weeds to see if they were hot and if they were then they would paint them orange. Then there were reports of orange tumbleweeds floating down the Columbia river, so they stopped painting them. Seriously?!?!

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dukarl said on November 5, 2010 at 7:04 PM

OH MAN WHY THEY KILL IT THEY COULD HAVE SHIPPED TO DC AND TURNED IT LOOSE THERE ANY WITH ANY LUCK IT COULD START WIPING OUT THE CANCERS IN DC

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rnl52 said on November 5, 2010 at 3:37 PM

Wadioactive wabbits !!!

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lmao_today said on November 5, 2010 at 3:20 PM

Night of the Lupus all over again.

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pribby said on November 5, 2010 at 12:14 PM

This is like SNL's Digital Short "Laser Cats" all over again!

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nikkiann11 said on November 5, 2010 at 11:51 AM

I smell a superhero!

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shedboy said on November 5, 2010 at 11:36 AM

Nothing about the riots in Ireland and Greece. Nothing about the price of oil going to near $90 barrel? ....but this non-story about radioactive rabbits?!? A LIVE radioactive rabbit no less. I thought radioactivity was supposed to kill things. And rabbits in a basement? I highly doubt that....rats maybe, best start trapping them because they co-habitate with humans frequently. Is this fresh political rhetoric? A plea for more money? Really weak scare tactics? Or just plain stupid reporting? Everybody run for your lives! It's the radioactive rabbit! Oh...and Gold is about to break $1400 an oz, but never mind...this is WAY more important.

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kevinineverett said on November 5, 2010 at 11:12 AM

Can't wait to hear the jokes on the late night and other comedy shows. A nuclear Bugs Bunny strikes Washington State. OMG lol

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qhorselvr said on November 5, 2010 at 10:57 AM

How do they know it was radioactive, was it glowing? If so I suggest hunting them at night they will show up better.

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awesomeo said on November 5, 2010 at 10:55 AM

OMG! has anyone told the rabbits partners?

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dkjamerican said on November 5, 2010 at 9:56 AM

Truthfully, what aren't telling us? How can we trust a governement that don't trust their own people and have little regard for their lives. When I live in Baker Oregon in the early 80s, North eastern Oregon to Hanford had the highest rate of brain cancers per capita than any place in the US so I was told by a Cancer Specialist.

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hapnsallthetime said on November 5, 2010 at 9:41 AM

and the award for weirdest headline of the day goes to....

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coyotebmw said on November 5, 2010 at 9:25 AM

Oh! No! Does this mean there are Radioactive Coyotes Now!

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dirtydon said on November 5, 2010 at 8:52 AM

The next Super Hero

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think said on November 5, 2010 at 7:36 AM

Nice to see mismanagement of our highly toxic nuclear facilites, and their demolition. Wonder what else is just 'laying around' the site? If a rabbit can get to it, what about the birds?

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