The town of Dundalk on the North-eastern coast of Ireland experiences
high levels of stillbirths, miscarriages, birth defects and cancers.
Mary Grehan, who has been studying medical abnormalities in Dundalk
since the fire at Sellafield (then called Windscale) 40 years
ago, found that the disease patterns resembled those experienced
around Chernobyl.
More research is needed if the cause, and therefore remedies,
can be identified but, for Mary, as a possible source, “Sellafield
sticks out like a sore thumb”.
(5771) Karen Birchard. Lancet 4.9.99 p845
Is Danish plutonium from Sellafield?
More than 200 kilograms of plutonium were discharged into a bank
of sediment in the Irish Sea by the UK's Sellafield nuclear re-processing
plant. It appeared that they did not stay there, as scientists
predicted, but were washed round the north of Scotland into the
North Sea.
Concentrations of plutonium found off the west coast of Denmark
had an isotope ratio which pointed the finger at Sellafield.
Justin Brown, a senior scientist from the Norwegian Radiation
Protection Authority (NRPA) said, "If these sediments (at the
bottom of the Irish Sea) are confirmed to be the source, plutonium
will be detectable in these waters for the foreseeable future".