地震了!震中:Shawville, QC,距离渥太华21公里,震级5.1. 时间9点43. 余震9点53,震级4.2

  • 主题发起人 主题发起人 Riven
  • 开始时间 开始时间
Automatic detection of seismic event: magnitude 4.2 - 17 May 9:53 EDT - BRAESIDE, ON region


Fri 17 May 9:43 EDT A magnitude 5.1 earthquake occurred 21 km NE of Shawville, QC, felt, Map
 
本村首富Terry Matthews 也在Kanata North住

he was immigrated from the UK..so he might not know it when he built his maison...:rolleyes:

Bill Teron was diffrent though, he's local boy:D
 
区别就在于, 如果核反应堆爆炸的话, 靠得近的地方的人身体50%受辐射, 远点的同在Ottawa地区的人, 25%受辐射, 多活半年而已.:D:D

多傻佛半年:mad::blink::(:crying:
 
he was immigrated from the UK..so he might not know it when he built his maison...:rolleyes:

Bill Teron was diffrent though:D

那咱们都去投石头吧?:p
 
Fri 17 May 9:43 EDT A magnitude 5.2 earthquake occurred 18 km NE of Shawville, QC, felt in the Ottawa-Gatineau area and out to Toronto and Waterloo. Details
The earthquake was followed by a magnitude 4.1 aftershock at 9:53 EDT Details
 
在大自然灾难的时候, 往往多活半年的比先走的更痛苦.

就像无期徒刑犯天天去刑场陪绑,不病死也早晚给吓死。:D
 
在大自然灾难的时候, 往往多活半年的比先走的更痛苦.

人为的灾难也一样。最后留在北电的比最先被踩的不知要傻佛多少倍。
 
顺道问一下,咱们的房屋保险,有保地震这一说吗?还是要附加?

没有, 我加了100/年。
 
据说不包括地震险。地震险单保,而且非常贵(几倍于平常的保险)。:blowzy:

每问过保险公司吧?咱这不属于地震多发带 $100/年。要是温哥华就贵了。
 
“It’s always a concern,” Brown said.


Underground radioactive waste eyed for Chalk River

OTTAWA Enough nuclear waste to fill more than a hundred Olympic-sized swimming pools could be buried in an underground chamber near the Ottawa River, upstream from Parliament Hill and about a million residents of the nation’s capital.

The federal government is eyeing the site of the Chalk River nuclear reactor, 160 kilometres northwest of Ottawa, as a radioactive waste site.

Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. says 267,000 cubic metres of low- and medium-grade nuclear waste is now stored above-ground in steel containers at the Chalk River site. The amount of radioactive material is expected to grow to 360,000 cubic metres by 2100. That’s enough debris to fill 106 Olympic swimming pools now, and 144 by the end of the century.

Government-owned AECL is looking at building an enormous underground repository to bury the detritus of six decades of nuclear testing at the Chalk River site. The cavernous compound would consist of shafts, access tunnels and as many as 223 storage rooms for the radioactive waste.

A document posted recently on a website that advertises government contracts outlines the proposal.

“Atomic Energy of Canada Limited is investigating the suitability of the Chalk River laboratories site for hosting a geologic waste management facility as part of the Nuclear Legacy Liabilities Program funded through Natural Resources Canada,” the document says.

“The (geologic waste management facility) is envisioned to be an underground engineered-geological repository consisting of shafts, access tunnels and emplacement caverns located at a nominal depth of 500 to 1,000 metres in the bedrock at the (Chalk River laboratories) site.”

Site studied for 6 years

AECL began looking at the Chalk River site as a nuclear burial ground six years ago. While the government has not yet decided where to bury the radioactive waste, Chalk River holds promise.

“No features have been found to disqualify the bedrock of the Chalk River laboratories site from hosting a GWMF,” the document says.

“The bedrock of the Chalk River laboratories site below a depth of 400 to 500 metres appears to have a good potential to safely host a GWMF for Chalk River laboratories’ (low- and intermediate-level radioactive waste) although the work to date is premature in nature.

“The many unknowns and uncertainties ... will need to be addressed as part of any future detailed siting-characterization process, if the government of Canada decides to initiate such a process.”

Ottawa Riverkeeper, a local conservation group, meets regularly with AECL to talk about the health and safety of the waterway. The group’s executive director, Meredith Brown, said there is always some chance radioactive material could leak into the Ottawa River.

“It’s always a concern,” Brown said.

“There’s always a chance (of a leak). I guess it depends largely on how they build it, right? I mean, obviously they’re going to have to built it to handle any seismic activity in the area. I take it that they know what they’re doing in that respect.”

Site in Earthquake zone

The proposed site is in the Western Quebec seismic zone, an earthquake belt that surrounds the Ottawa Valley from Montreal to the town of Temiscaming, Que., as well as the Laurentian mountains and parts of Eastern Ontario.

The AECL contract document notes the majority earthquakes in the area are very small, measuring between 2.0 and 4.5 in magnitude on the Richter scale.

However, the Natural Resources Department’s website says there have been at least three significant earthquakes there in the past. The most powerful occurred in 1935, when an earthquake measuring 6.2 on the Richter scale shook the Temiscaming area.

No one from AECL was available for an interview.

In an emailed statement, the Crown corporation said it would not make any decisions about where to store the waste without a full environmental assessment and public consultation.

“This is the first step in a long process designed to find a safe location for the long-term storage of low- and intermediate-level radioactive waste, which is already located at the Chalk River site,” the statement said.

“No decisions have been made by the Government to locate such a facility to (Chalk River laboratories); this (request-for-proposals) is a preliminary step to assess whether the site warrants continued consideration.

“AECL has completed a number of studies that investigate options for the long-term management of the legacy radioactive waste stored at the Chalk River site. AECL will continue to contribute expertise to support government decision-making regarding the infrastructure required to manage this waste inventory.”

The Crown corporation has long been a headache for successive federal governments. AECL has cost Canadian taxpayers billions of dollars and faced major cost overruns at key projects in recent years while struggling to find a buyer.

In May 2009, the Conservative government announced plans to spin off AECL’s commercial reactor business from its research division. The announcement coincided with what turned into a lengthy shutdown of the company’s Chalk River research reactor, which caused a worldwide shortage of the medical isotopes used to detect cancer and heart ailments.

The National Research Universal reactor was down for 15 months. There were times when it looked like the half-century-old reactor might never return to service.

An earlier shutdown in late 2007 also strained the global isotope supply and ended only after Parliament voted to bypass the nuclear safety regulator’s closure order.

The government finally sold AECL’s Candu nuclear reactor business to SNC-Lavalin in October for $15 million.

Since the sale of the reactor business, AECL has focused on its nuclear laboratories division, mainly in Chalk River and Pinawa, Man. The division, which has a staff of more than 3,000, manages nuclear waste, conducts research and produces medical isotopes.

The Canadian Press
 
没有, 我加了100/年。

你那房子如果被震垮,整个渥太华将被夷为平地。

不过,100刀也不算个啥。
 
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