Last night TDW flipped it over to NatGeo after my daughter went to bed, and found a program called "Aftermath: Population Zero". I missed the first few minutes, so I'm not sure of exactly why the human race was wiped out, but apparently every single hum on the planet died. Sometime around day 10 the waste from nuclear fuel had superheated to the point of explosion. They claim that each storage facility will explode from the split atoms continuing to heat up and the refrigeration systems being offline, and will be a nuclear explosion 20 times the size of Chernobyl, which was 50k sq. mi. So that puts one storage facility at 1 million sq. miles. With 78 facilitys in the united states alone, 158 across europe, and a whopping 58 on the island of Japan, this seems like a disaster that would completely kill all life. They state that strontium-90 will be active for 300 years (I think) and that plutonium would be radioactive for something like 248k years (I think).
My questions is based around the fact that they show animals living through this if they are large enough to survive the 1 1/2 inch of radioactive penetration, so whereas rodents die, larger animals would simply have radiation poisoning but their internal organs would be "unharmed".
Basically, I was wondering if anyone else had seen the show, and what your opinion on it was. Does this look like plausible reality to you based on the situation, or do you think it's all just wishful thinking and that the technology we created to further our comfortable life style will ultimately radiate the planet into oblivion?
http://channel.nationalgeographic.co...nel/aftermath/




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