----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2002 3:37 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list]
TRINITITE
Mark,
Please consult the encyclopeedia during a full
moon. Then locate
an old infinity pin and conect it up to a medupeoloid
radiator. Afterwards
get a cluck cluck sauce cookie from someones mama and
take your uranium balls to the vet.
xoxoxo, MC
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2002 5:20
PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list]
TRINITITE
Hello All,
My trinite will just barely moves my gigacounter....barely. The
uranium balls I have (and will soon be selling) move it more. My
furniture does not move the gigacounter (nor does any of
meteorites or anything else I could find in my house.
My father was a radition specialist in the army and use to give classes
in the early 80's when everybody was still kinda worried about Russia nuking
the US. They used these heavy lead boxes to store small radioactive
things in.
Also I do not believe, or see how, tin foil would stop a gamma
ray or alpha ray..
Mark
----- Original Message -----
From:
Edward Hodges
Sent: Tuesday, May 28, 2002 3:16
PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list]
TRINITITE
I'm much too concerned with heating up my irradiated
hamburger in my
microwave while talking on my cell phone, and drinking
directly from the
faucet. Honestly, there must be a thousand more
dangerous things that we do
everyday. I might have them swept with a
Geiger counter, or place them on
unexposed film just to be sure, but I
don't think there's any real danger.-
Edward
>From:
Michael Blood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: rochette <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>CC:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: [meteorite-list]
TRINITITE
>Date: Tue, 28 May 2002 11:50:46 -0800
>
>Hi
Pierre,
> "Better men than I," as the saying goes, have told me 2
different
>things regarding the radioactivity of
Trinitite:
>1) That its radioactive level is so low as to be
completely irrelivant
>& that you could tape it to the inside of
your jock strap and wear
>it daily with ZERO impact on yourself or
your offspring (I wouldn't
>reccommend this, myself)
>2)
Others have said it has a "lower" level of radioactivity than
the
>furnature in your home (I don't see how this is possible - but
I lack
>insight on several things)
> I do know some collectors
keep their Trinitite wrapped in
>tin foil "just in case" - but then,
some people wear tin foil hats to
>protect them from the radio
beams....
> Best wishes, Michael
>
>--
>rochette
wrote:
> > I am amazed that some people dare collecting this
material!
> > Army people say its radioactivity "should" have
come now to acceptable
> > level, but first who is able to trust
100% such quote (from people who
> > experimented injection of
plutonium into humans without telling them)
>and
> > second
even if on average this material may be relatively safe,
one
>cannot
> > exclude that a given sample is by chance
loaded with a speck of
>plutonium...
> >
> > so no
thanks, even if cheaper than natural impact glass!
> >
>
> Pierre
> >
> >
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