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To: John Walliker who wrote (89232)10/1/1999 8:24:00 PM
From: John F. Dowd  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
JW: I believe there is a place in Gabon where the mass of Uranium is rich enough that there was a small sustained reaction. JFD P.S. If you have the enriched pellets it is not too hard as the man from Nippon demonstrated the other day to get a little chain reaction cooking.



To: John Walliker who wrote (89232)10/1/1999 10:43:00 PM
From: Dan3  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 186894
 
Re: I believe that there is geological evidence for criticality....

You are right, and it's a fascinating story, but it still doesn't make creating such an event easy. That incident in Japan shouldn't have happened. Brown's Ferry, Three Mile Island, and Chernobyl were complex situations, this incident in Japan sounds sloppy stupid.

Dan
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physics.isu.edu
Uranium contains only one naturallyoccurring isotope, 235U, which will sustain a nuclear chain reaction using normal water to moderate and reflect neutrons. At present, this isotope is present in low abundance (0.72%), requiring enrichment to 3% or greater for effective use in commercial nuclear reactors. Two billion years ago, however, the natural abundance of 235U was approximately 3%. Evidence indicates that a rich uranium deposit in Gabon, West Africa achieved nuclear criticality and operated for tens of thousands of years or longer. Comparing the geometric and nuclear characteristics of the Gabon reactor with those of modern, artificial nuclear reactors supports this possibility. An examination of rare earth elements and 235U abundance in the rocks that comprise the reactor zone confirm that a nuclear reactor did operate at this site 1.7 Ga, using surface and groundwaters to moderate and reflect fission neutrons in order to sustain the chain reaction. Finally, it is apparent that 239Pu was produced in measurable quantities, suggesting that uranium is not the heaviest naturally occurring element known.
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