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Meltdown: Earthquake, Tsunami, and Nuclear Disaster in Fukushima

Page 14

by Deirdre Langeland


  radioactive material

  paved over

  sailors removing, from USS Ronald Reagan

  travel capacity of

  radioactive soil, digging up

  radioactivity, in water

  radon

  Rayleigh waves

  reactor core isolation cooling system (RCIC)

  reactor maintenance

  reactor status

  March 11, 2011 (Friday)

  March 12, 2011 (Saturday)

  March 13, 2011 (Sunday)

  March 14, 2011 (Monday)

  March 15, 2011 (Tuesday)

  reactor vessel

  corium eating through

  design of

  hydrogen explosion in

  pressure building in

  radioactive isotopes escaping from

  steel containment lid for

  remote control, radiation of

  rescue efforts, after earthquake and tsunami

  response team. See emergency response team

  rias

  Ring of Fire

  robots, radiation destroying

  Ronald Reagan, USS

  caught in radioactive cloud

  sailors developing cancer aboard

  sailors removing radioactive material from

  Roos, John V.

  rotational energy

  S

  S waves. See secondary waves

  Sakurai, Katsunobu

  Sanriku Coast, Honshu

  Sasaki, Itaru

  Sasaki, Seizo

  Sato, Yuhei

  scram

  seawalls

  at Fudai

  at Fukushima

  at Miyako

  along Tohoku coast

  seawater, used for nuclear reactors

  secondary containment

  secondary waves (S waves)

  seismic isolated building

  at Fukushima Daiichi

  seismic waves. See also specific types

  at Fukushima

  movement creating

  speed of

  seismographs

  seismologists

  seismology

  Sendai

  serious accident, INES

  serious incident, INES

  shield

  cladding

  lead

  water

  shielding

  radiation reduced by time, distance and

  time, distance and

  sievert (Sv)

  Simpson, Homer

  spent fuel

  storage pools holding

  steam

  release of, to lower pressure

  valves opened for release of

  venting

  water, electricity and

  zirconium reaction with

  stickiness, of tectonic plates

  storage pools

  spent fuel held in

  strontium

  subduction

  subduction faults

  subduction zone

  sulfur dioxide

  Sulzberger Ice Shelf, Antarctica

  suppression pool. See torus

  surface waves

  survival, after earthquake and tsunami

  survivors

  food, shelter and family searched for by

  of hydrogen explosion

  stories of

  Sv. See sievert

  T

  Takahashi, Katsuko

  tank collapse, at Cosmo Oil refinery

  tectonic plates

  Eurasion Plate

  Filipino Plate

  movement of

  North American Plate

  Pacific Plate

  stickiness of

  subduction faults and

  tendenko (evacuation strategy)

  children practicing

  disaster memory and

  reality of

  TEPCO. See Tokyo Electric Power Company

  thermal energy

  thorium

  Three Mile Island, nuclear accident at

  time

  distance, shielding and

  radiation reduced by distance, shielding and

  timeline, of events

  Tohoku region, Honshu

  map of

  southernmost region

  Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO)

  anger toward

  on dismantling nuclear reactors at Fukushima Daiichi

  public statements by

  rolling blackouts announced by

  staff from

  Tomioka

  torus

  function of

  malfunctioning of

  steam within

  tremors

  tsunami stones

  tsunamis

  Abe experience of

  anticipation for

  destruction from

  following earthquakes

  Fudai hit by

  GPS buoys identifying

  Great Tohoku Earthquake generating

  height of waves from

  history of, in Japan

  Kurosawa experience of

  Miyako hit by

  movement of

  normalcy after

  photos of damage from

  prediction of

  rapid movement of

  rescue efforts after

  sound of

  survival from

  Usuzawa experience of

  victims of

  warnings for

  turbine

  turbine building

  U

  ultraviolet light, radiation of

  United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR)

  unstable

  uranium

  atom of uranium

  fission and

  transforming into radioactive isotopes

  used in nuclear reactors

  uranium pellets

  in fuel rods

  Usuzawa, Ryoichi

  earthquake experience of

  evacuation center work by

  home lost

  tsunami experience of

  V

  valves

  as closed

  mission to open

  opening of, for steam to escape

  power needed to open

  vent (verb)

  visible light, radiation of

  volcanoes

  W

  warning systems

  wastewater, dumped in ocean

  water

  makeup of

  molecule of

  radioactivity in

  steam, electricity and

  Wi-Fi

  World Health Organization (WHO)

  World War II

  X

  X-rays, radiation from

  Y

  Yoshida, Masao

  brainstorming by

  death of

  evacuation orders by

  fear of death

  Kan meeting with

  seawater used as last resort by

  taking stock of reactors

  team to help

  workers organized by

  Yoshizawa, Atsufumi

  Z

  zirconium cladding

  steam reaction with

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Deirdre Langeland has been a children’s book editor and writer for more than twenty years. She freelances as an editor and ghostwriter, focusing on science and nature explainers for young readers. She lives in New York’s Hudson River Valley. You can sign up for email updates here.

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  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

&n
bsp; Dedication

  Preface

  Day 1: Earthquake

  Tsunami

  Station Blackout

  Day 2: Meltdown

  Day 3: Evacuation

  Day 4: Radioactive Cloud

  Day 5: Fukushima 50

  Day 6: Turning Point

  Lessons

  Timeline

  Glossary

  Bibliography

  Quotation and Source Notes

  Acknowledgments

  Image Credits

  Index

  About the Author

  Copyright

  A note on magnitude and terminology: The earthquake and tsunami event that occurred off the northeast coast of Japan on March 11, 2011, is commonly called by several different names. The Japan Meteorological Agency originally referred to it as the 2011 Off the Pacific Coast of Tohoku Earthquake and later as the Great East Japan Earthquake. It is often listed as the Tohoku-Oki Earthquake as well. For the purpose of this book, I have called it by the name used by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the U.S. National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration: the Great Tohoku Earthquake. The reported magnitude of the event also varies by source, but was revised upward to 9.1 by the USGS in November 2016.

  On the scale used by seismologists to measure large earthquakes, the Moment Magnitude Scale, each jump in magnitude is an increase in energy released of 32 times, resulting in an increase of ten times in the amplitude of the seismic waves generated by the event. The terms “hypocenter” and “subduction fault,” used herein, are synonymous with the terms “focus” and “megathrust,” respectively.

  Copyright © 2021 by Deirdre Langeland

  Published by Roaring Brook Press

  Roaring Brook Press is a division of Holtzbrinck Publishing Holdings Limited Partnership

  120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271 • mackids.com

  All rights reserved.

  Library of Congress Control Number 2020912214

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  eISBN 9781626726994

  First hardcover edition 2021

  eBook edition 2021

 

 

 


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