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Title:
Fallout : disasters, lies, and the legacy of the nuclear age / Fred Pearce.
Author:
Pearce, Fred, author.
Publication Information:
Boston, Massachusetts : Beacon Press, [2018]
Call Number:
TD196.R3 P43 2018
Abstract:
"Environmental journalist Fred Pearce travels the globe to investigate our complicated seven-decade long relationship with nuclear technology, from the bomb to nuclear accidents to nuclear waste. While concern about climate change has led some environmentalists to embrace renewable energy sources like wind and solar, others have expressed a renewed interest in nuclear power as an alternative source of carbon-neutral energy. But can humanity handle the risks involved? In Fallout, Fred Pearce uncovers the environmental and psychological landscapes created since the dropping of the first atomic bomb. Traveling from Nevada to Japan to the UK to secret sites of the old Soviet Union, he explores first the landscapes transformed by uranium and by nuclear accidents--sites both well-known and little known. He then examines in detail the toxic legacies of nuclear technology, the emerging dilemmas over handling its waste, the decommissioning of the great radioactive structures of the nuclear age, and the fearful doublethink over our growing stockpiles of plutonium, the most lethal and ubiquitous product of nuclear technologies. How, Pearce asks, has the nuclear experience has changed us? Is nuclear technology indeed the existential threat it sometimes appears? Should we be burdening future generations with radioactive waste that will be deadly for thousands of years? Fallout is the definitive look at humanity's nuclear adventure, for any reader who craves a clear-headed examination of the tangled relationship between a powerful technology and human politics, foibles, fears, and arrogance"-- Provided by publisher.

Mankind has a seven-decade long relationship with nuclear technology, from the bomb to nuclear accidents to nuclear waste. While concern about climate change has led some environmentalists to embrace renewable energy sources, others have expressed a renewed interest in nuclear power as an alternative source of carbon-neutral energy. But can humanity handle the risks involved? Pearce traveled the globe to uncover the environmental and psychological landscapes created since the dropping of the first atomic bomb. Should we be burdening future generations with radioactive waste that will be deadly for thousands of years? -- adapted from publisher info.
ISBN:
9780807092491

9780807073506
Physical Description:
viii, 255 pages ; 24 cm
Contents:
Introduction : Anthropocene journey -- Part one. The destroyer of worlds. Hiroshima : an invisible scar -- Critical mass : MAUD in the nuclear garden -- Las Vegas : every mushroom cloud has a silver lining -- Pacific tests : Godzilla and the Lucky dragon -- Semipalatinsk : secrets of the steppe -- Plutonium mountain : proliferation paradise -- Part two. Cold War and hot particles. Mayak : "pressed for time" behind the Urals -- Metlino : even the Samovars were radioactive -- Rocky flats : plutonium in the snake pit -- Colorado silos : Uncle Sam's nuclear heartland -- Broken arrows : Dr. Strangelove and the radioactive rabbits -- Windscale fire : "a cover-up, plain and simple" -- Part three. Atoms for peace. Three Mile Island : how not to run a power plant -- Chernobyl : a "beautiful" disaster -- Chernobyl : vodka and fallout -- Chernobyl : hunting in packs -- Fukushima : a scorpion's discovery -- Fukushima : Baba's homecoming -- Radiophobia : the ghost at Fukushima -- Millisieverts : a dose of reason -- Part four. Cleaning up. Sizewell : the nuclear laundryman -- Sellafield : stone circles and nuclear legacies -- Hanford : decommissioning an industry -- Gorleben : passport to a non-nuclear future? -- Waste : out of harm's way -- Conclusion : making peace in Nagasaki.
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