GirlHacker's Random Log

almost daily since 1999

 

The NY Times’ Moscow Journal reports that regular inspections for radioactivity are made on produce and meats. Moscow is 415 miles from the Chernobyl nuclear-power plant which blew a reactor in 1986. Inspectors seized 3,050 pounds of radioactive produce last year and expect a 10% increase in 2002. The problem arises not with farm-grown produce but with the wild goods harvested by folks looking to supplement their incomes by selling berries and mushrooms. Open-air produce markets have labs busy with inspectors checking goods. It’s now forest mushroom harvest time, but Cesium 137, easily absorbed by mushrooms, has a half-life of 30 years. Russians love their wild mushrooms, but they must remember that those grandmas selling produce on the street corners haven’t had their mushrooms probed with a spectrometer.