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At first no one cared about the catastrophe ...

Japan's Fukushima began to discharge nuclear wastewater into the ocean to sweep the world, and few people paid attention to the death of Wagnerian leader Prigozhin and other executives on a private jet.

Under normal circumstances, the amount of general nuclear wastewater is not much, and it can basically be properly treated. For example, first filter and clean, then store it in a jar slowly, let it stand for decades, wait for the radioactivity to drop to a safe range, and then find a place to dump it.

In 2011, when the Fukushima earthquake struck, the bottom of the nuclear power plant cracked, and the surrounding groundwater seeped in. It stands to reason that these waters have to be treated according to the process described above, but they can't hold too much, and the jars that store water are not enough.

Therefore, the Japanese government simply fell into trouble...

The biggest hazard is nuclear radiation. There are many radioactive substances in nuclear sewage, such as tritium, carbon-14, etc., and their half-lives are very long, starting from more than 5,000 years.

Most of these radioactive substances will decay neutrons, producing ionizing radiation in the process, which will run amok and destroy in the cell. Cells may be hung up directly, causing disease, or they may mutate and become cancerous because DNA is destroyed.

So seafood can't be eaten is only the smallest harm, genetic mutations are highly uncertain, and go to the bad places, so what if Resident Evil comes into reality?

At first no one cared about the catastrophe ...
At first no one cared about the catastrophe ...
At first no one cared about the catastrophe ...

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