
Radioactive wasps found at South Carolina nuclear facility
The nest was sprayed to kill the wasps, officials said. After probing the nest, they found that it was at 100,000 dpm, a moderately high radiation level, WYFF noted.
The nest is viewed as 'onsite legacy radioactive contamination' and not connected to a loss of control when it comes to contamination.
Legacy radioactive contamination is the remaining contamination from previous activities. The Department of Energy didn't cite any other reasons behind the contamination of the wasps, with the officials noting that the ground and surrounding area did not have any contamination.
The finding didn't impact other operations at the 310-square-mile facility. The site was constructed in the 1950s to produce the materials needed to build nuclear weapons during the Cold War, such as tritium and plutonium-239.
After becoming a Superfund site for the Environmental Protection Agency, cleanup and environmental remediation efforts began.
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Daily Mail
3 days ago
- Daily Mail
More radioactive wasp nests found at former US nuclear bomb site
The discovery of additional radioactive wasp nests at a former US nuclear bomb plant has raised concerns that the facility may be leaking hazardous material. Workers at the Savannah River Site (SRS) near Aiken, South Carolina, uncovered three more contaminated nests following the initial find on July 3, which was emitting radiation levels 10 times higher than federal safety limits. The Department of Energy (DOE) confirmed it is aware of the situation and stated that the nests have been sprayed, sealed in bags as radiological waste and properly disposed of. The SRS, which was established in the early 1950s, played a key role in producing plutonium and tritium for America's nuclear weapons program throughout the Cold War . A spokesperson for Savannah River Mission Completion (SRMC), the contractor responsible for site cleanup, told the Daily Mail that teams recovered dead wasps after exterminating the nests. The insects, according to the spokesperson, showed lower levels of contamination than the nests themselves. While the DOE insists there has been no leakage from nearby nuclear waste tanks, some scientists are urging caution. Dr Timothy Mousseau, a biologist at the University of South Carolina, told The New York Times that the contaminated nests suggest radioactive materials may be more widely dispersed across the area than previously believed. 'This is an indicator that there are contaminants spread across this area that have not been completely encased and protected,' Mousseau said, adding that the latest discoveries 'indicate that much greater effort must be made to assess the possible risks and hazards of what appears to be a significant source of radioactive pollutants.' SRMC said all four nests were found in F Tank Farm, an area toward the middle of the 310-square mile SRS boundary or more than five miles from the closest site boundary. The F-Area Tank Farm where the nest was found holds 22 massive underground tanks, each up to 100 feet wide and 23 feet deep, packed with between 750,000 and 1.3 million gallons of radioactive waste. Legacy contamination refers to pollution that persists in the environment from past activities, even after the original sources of contamination have ceased. 'The main concern relates to whether or not there are large areas of significant contamination that have escaped surveillance in the past,' Dr Mousseau told the New York Times , adding that the nests are a 'red flag' that should be investigated further. While SRMC said dead wasps were recently recovered, the group admitted that none were recovered after the first nest was found. However, the site's spokesperson stressed that 'nests do not pose a health risk to SRS workers, surrounding communities, or the environment. They added that the average person is exposed to about 620 millirem (mrem) of radiation each year from both natural and man-made sources. 'All of the nests were emitting less than one percent of the natural background radiation rate. Mrem is a unit of measurement for radiation dose equivalent for humans,' the spokesperson continued. However, the watchdog group Savannah River Site Watch slammed the report as 'incomplete,' saying it fails to explain the source of the contamination, how wasps were exposed or if more radioactive nests may be hidden. Tom Clements, executive director of the group, told AP: 'I'm as mad as a hornet that SRS didn't explain where the radioactive waste came from or if there is some kind of leak from the waste tanks that the public should be aware of.'


Daily Mail
3 days ago
- Daily Mail
Radiation panic at US nuclear bomb plant as more toxic wasp nests discovered
The discovery of additional radioactive wasp nests at a former US nuclear bomb plant has raised concerns that the facility may be leaking hazardous material. Workers at the Savannah River Site (SRS) near Aiken, South Carolina, uncovered three more contaminated nests following the initial find on July 3, which was emitting radiation levels 10 times higher than federal safety limits. The Department of Energy (DOE) confirmed it is aware of the situation and stated that the nests have been sprayed, sealed in bags as radiological waste and properly disposed of. The SRS, which was established in the early 1950s, played a key role in producing plutonium and tritium for America's nuclear weapons program throughout the Cold War. A spokesperson for Savannah River Mission Completion (SRMC), the contractor responsible for site cleanup, told the Daily Mail that teams recovered dead wasps after exterminating the nests. The insects, according to the spokesperson, showed lower levels of contamination than the nests themselves. While the DOE insists there has been no leakage from nearby nuclear waste tanks, some scientists are urging caution. Dr Timothy Mousseau, a biologist at the University of South Carolina, told The New York Times that the contaminated nests suggest radioactive materials may be more widely dispersed across the area than previously believed. 'This is an indicator that there are contaminants spread across this area that have not been completely encased and protected,' Mousseau said, adding that the latest discoveries 'indicate that much greater effort must be made to assess the possible risks and hazards of what appears to be a significant source of radioactive pollutants.' SRMC said all four nests were found in F Tank Farm, an area toward the middle of the 310-square mile SRS boundary or more than five miles from the closest site boundary. The F-Area Tank Farm where the nest was found holds 22 massive underground tanks, each up to 100 feet wide and 23 feet deep, packed with between 750,000 and 1.3 million gallons of radioactive waste. 'Wasp flight patterns keep them within about 200 yards of their nest typically, with a rare exception of a half of a mile from their nests,' the spokesperson explained. 'Also, the typical lifespan of these wasps is less than one month. 'The nests became contaminated by wasps that brought light contamination to the nests because of intrusion into areas with legacy contamination.' Legacy contamination refers to pollution that persists in the environment from past activities, even after the original sources of contamination have ceased. 'The main concern relates to whether or not there are large areas of significant contamination that have escaped surveillance in the past,' Dr Mousseau told the New York Times, adding that the nests are a 'red flag' that should be investigated further. While SRMC said dead wasps were recently recovered, the group admitted that none were recovered after the first nest was found. However, the site's spokesperson stressed that 'nests do not pose a health risk to SRS workers, surrounding communities, or the environment. They added that the average person is exposed to about 620 millirem (mrem) of radiation each year from both natural and man-made sources. 'All of the nests were emitting less than one percent of the natural background radiation rate. Mrem is a unit of measurement for radiation dose equivalent for humans,' the spokesperson continued. However, the watchdog group Savannah River Site Watch slammed the report as 'incomplete,' saying it fails to explain the source of the contamination, how wasps were exposed or if more radioactive nests may be hidden. Tom Clements, executive director of the group, told AP: 'I'm as mad as a hornet that SRS didn't explain where the radioactive waste came from or if there is some kind of leak from the waste tanks that the public should be aware of.'


Daily Mirror
3 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Radioactive wasps nest sparks urgent warning at Cold War nuclear weapon site
Four wasp nests contaminated with radioactive material have sparked concern that new or old radioactive contamination is coming to the surface at the old site An unusual discovery at a former Cold War nuclear weapons facility in South Carolina has triggered alarm bells, with scientists warning it could mean contaminants are leaking. Four wasp nests contaminated with radioactive material at the Savannah River Site (SRS), a sprawling, 310-square-mile complex near Aiken, South Carolina, have been discovered. The site, once used to produce plutonium and tritium for nuclear weapons, is now primarily focused on environmental cleanup - a project the US Department of Energy (DOE) says won't be completed until 2065. The first of the nests was discovered in early July by workers near a nuclear waste tank. The wasps were exterminated and the nest was disposed of as radioactive waste, according to a Department of Energy report. Three more contaminated nests have since been found in other parts of the site. It comes after the 'UK's most dangerous plant' leaves toddler in A&E with second-degree burns. Although DOE officials maintain there is no danger to workers or the surrounding community, the findings sparked questions about lingering contamination at the site - and whether current cleanup efforts are sufficient. 'This is an indicator that there are contaminants spread across this area that have not been completely encased and protected,' Dr Timothy Mousseau, a biologist at the University of South Carolina told the New York Times. Dr Mousseau, who has spent decades studying the ecological effects of nuclear radiation in Chernobyl and Fukushima, said the discovery raises the possibility that radioactive material, previously believed to be safely contained, may still be accessible to wildlife. He warned that while the public is unlikely to be exposed to radioactive stings - since wasps rarely travel more than 100 yards from their nests - the insects are acting as accidental messengers of a deeper problem. 'This could indicate that there is some new or old radioactive contamination that is coming to the surface that was unexpected,' Dr Mousseau added. One theory is that the wasps used pulp from discarded or contaminated wood to build their nests, inadvertently incorporating radioactive material into their hives. The Department of Energy has tried to calm concern. Edwin Deshong, manager of the DOE's Savannah River office, confirmed in a statement that the nests had "very low levels" of radioactive contamination and posed "no health risk to SRS workers, the community, or the environment." This isn't the first time wildlife at the SRS site has shown signs of contamination. In 2017, the DOE reported that radioactive bird droppings had been found on the roof of a site building, suggesting birds were picking up material and potentially carrying it far beyond the facility's borders. The SRS has been undergoing cleanup since 1996, a slow and complex process given the age of the site and the scale of contamination.