Blog shown in web view. Mrs. Mcmurray 's obtained proof Asarco smelter poisoned El Paso TX through what the EPA & US DOJ said was illegal burning of illegal hazardous/radioactive wastes 1991-98. (see 73 page 1998 conf. for settlement purposes only DOJ EPA Asarco doc,10/06 nytimes) We have never been told what actinides, forever chemicals, dioxins etc are present from illegal Asarco actions.
Hafnium
Search "hafnium" (found in nuclear plant control rods) within blog search gadget on right column
Friday, July 20, 2007
FL: residential limit for arsenic in soil or fill is 2.1 milligrams per kilogram
"...But the lake's shrinkage has also left a monumental cleanup headache: a  bathtub ring of toxic sludge from dumped wastewater and the objects hurled  in by hurricanes and litterbugs.  The slimy gray lining, if not a silver one, is that the drought has given  water managers an opportunity to scoop out the muck and refresh the  shoreline habitat for Okeechobee's flora and fauna.  In little more than two months, contractors with the South Florida Water  Management District have hauled away 2 million cubic yards of sludge —  enough to fill nine football stadiums from the field to the nosebleed seats,  said Tom Debold, water district supervisor on the muck-removal project.  After the muck was scraped and temporarily stored in 20-foot-high mounds set  back from the shore, scientists discovered that much of it contains  excessive levels of arsenic from pesticides and fertilizers used until the  1960s.  Water district and Army Corps of Engineers officials who maintain much of  the lake's surrounding levee and its intricate network of canals, sluices  and pumps had hoped to sell the excavated sludge to builders for landfill.  But after analysis, they concluded that "it can't be used near any kind of  housing facility," said Susan Gray, a biologist and deputy director of  watershed management for the district.  The residential limit for arsenic in soil or fill is 2.1 milligrams per  kilogram; the Okeechobee muck had as much as 9 milligrams per kilogram, Gray  said. The concentration of arsenic, which cannot be treated or neutralized,  is intensifying as water evaporates from the sludge and the desiccated piles  compress. Removal of the muck has allowed fresh shoots of bulrush and tape  grass to sprout and will improve the habitat for the bass and crappie that  draw thousands of anglers to the lake each year....  --http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-lake19jul19,1,1305309.story?coll=la-headlines-nation  from:  Okeechobee's treasures and toxic muck Archeologists gather clues to South Florida history as water managers work  to clean up the sludge left by drought. By Carol J. Williams, Times Staff Writer July 19, 2007 
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