Toxic and Nuclear-Contaminated Dust Plague UMTRA Superfund Site at Moab, Utah
On October 11, 2011, I drove from Moab, Utah to Grand Junction, Colorado. As I approached the Highway 191 Colorado River Bridge,
I swung my camera to the left, and out the side window of my truck.
Having refocused my digital camera, I started taking a series of “point
and shoot” images. Most of my shots were of the Moab UMTRA nuclear cleanup site, better known as the Moab Pile.
If I remember correctly, the wind was relatively
calm on October 11, 2011. Having studied the issue for years, little
that I learn about the cleanup of the old Atlas Uranium Mill site
surprises me. Still, I did not expect to see the event that unfolded
right outside my window. There, on the top of the Moab Pile, a dust
devil swirled and lifted a vortex of dust into the air.
Watch the video "Moab Pile Nuclear Dust Devil"
As I drove closer, my camera angle came closer to
the sun. As it did, it captured an image of finer dust particles
expanding above the twister. If you watch the YouTube video, you will see one frame in which that larger dust cloud shows itself in shades of lavender and violet. Just because
something
is not visible to the unaided eye does not mean that it may not be
there. The Carl Zeiss lens on my Sony camera sometimes picks up light in
unexpected ways, especially when it involves new energy.
Dust rising up from the Moab Pile, only to dump on the nearby Colorado River
and on Moab is a common occurrence. During both my August and October
2011 visits to Moab, I have photographed large amounts of radioactive
dust escaping from the UMTRA site. If I remember correctly, the
Department of Energy (DOE) should be setting reasonable safety standards
for the cleanup. However, toxic, nuclear dust clouds continue to
emanate from the Moab UMTRA site on a regular basis. Does DOE or Moab UMTRA care about that?
By James McGillis at 12:19 AM | | Comments (0) | Link