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Yanlex t1_iszj2hs wrote

Yes, but they are talking about radioactive materials being present: lead-210, polonium, and radium. The 22x amount specifically for the lead-210, not radiation level in general.

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zer1223 t1_iszkz99 wrote

There's a tiny bit of that stuff everywhere, yes. And I mean really really tiny

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Yanlex t1_iszmnjo wrote

No, there is not radioactive lead and polonium everywhere.

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razorirr t1_iszzhz5 wrote

Yeah there is for lead 210. Its a naturally occuring trace element in soil.

Dig up the ground on your property, send it for analysis, and they will find some amount of it. In the vast majority of places this amount will be so small, it wont matter.

Same goes for polonium 210.

The numbers are tiny, but they are not 0

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DiscountFoodStuffs t1_it05rse wrote

Lol what? Google: Polonium-210 and lead-210 in the terrestrial environment: a historical review or Occurrence and Geochemistry of Lead-210 and Polonium-210 Radionuclides in Public-Drinking-Water Supplies from Principal Aquifers of the United States

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bretto2004 t1_iszwjhm wrote

Are you stating a horrible fact, or genuinely sleep better at night thinking that only "tiny" amounts somehow don't cause cancer?

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Mend1cant t1_it04uyq wrote

I mean, tiny amounts don’t necessarily cause cancer. It really depends on how tiny it is. Radiation effects aren’t a black and white thing at low levels. Airline pilots are exposed to radiation at a higher level than most people working next to nuclear reactors just from background.

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