FACTOID # 113: In Denmark, more than 50% of the tax collected is personal income tax. In the Netherlands, personal income tax makes up less than 15%.
 
 Home   Encyclopedia   Statistics   Countries A-Z   Flags   Maps   Education   Forum   FAQ   About 
 
WHAT'S NEW
RECENT ARTICLES
More Recent Articles »
 

FACTS & STATISTICS    Simple view

  1. Select countries to view: (hold down Control key and click to select several)

     

     

    Compare:

     

     

  1. Select fact or statistic: (* = graphable)

     

     

     

  2. (OPTIONAL) Compare to statistic: (both need to be graphable)

     

     

     

  3. View result as:

     

       
(OR) SEARCH ALL encyclopedia, stats & forums:   

Encyclopedia > Three Mile Island
Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station consists of two nuclear reactors, each with its own containment building and cooling towers. TMI-2, which suffered a partial meltdown, is in the background.
Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station consists of two nuclear reactors, each with its own containment building and cooling towers. TMI-2, which suffered a partial meltdown, is in the background.

Three Mile Island is the location of a U.S. nuclear power plant that, on March 28, 1979, suffered a partial core meltdown. The Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station sits on an island in the Susquehanna River in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, near Harrisburg, of area 3.29 km² (814 acres). Image File history File links 3MileIsland. ... Image File history File links 3MileIsland. ... Core of a small nuclear reactor used for research. ... A containment building, in its most common usage, is a steel or concrete structure enclosing a nuclear reactor. ... Cooling towers are structures for cooling water or other working medium to near-ambient temperature. ... A nuclear meltdown occurs when the core of a nuclear reactor melts. ... Motto: E pluribus unum (1789 to 1956) (Latin: Out of Many, One) In God We Trust (1956 to present) Anthem: The Star-Spangled Banner Capital Washington, D.C. Largest city New York City Official language(s) None at federal level; English de facto Government • President • Vice President Federal Republic George... A nuclear power station. ... March 28 is the 87th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (88th in Leap years). ... This page refers to the year 1979. ... A nuclear meltdown occurs when the core of a nuclear reactor melts, and is generally considered a serious nuclear accident. ... Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station is a civilian nuclear power plant located on an artificial island (Three Mile Island) in the Susquehanna River near Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, United States. ... The Susquehanna River is a river in the northeastern United States. ... Dauphin County is a county located in the state of Pennsylvania and is one of four counties comprising the greater Harrisburg metropolitan area. ... Map Location in Pennsylvania Political Statistics Founded c. ... To help compare sizes of different geographic regions, we list here areas between 1 km² (100 hectares) and 10 km² (1000 hectares). ...


The accident unfolded over the course of five tense days, as a number of agencies at the federal, state, and local level attempted to diagnose the problem (the full details of the accident were not discovered until much later), and decide whether or not the on-going accident required a full evacuation of the population. In the end, the reactor was brought under control. No identifiable injuries due to radiation occurred (a government report concluded that "the projected number of excess fatal cancers due to the accident ... is approximately one"), but the accident had serious economic and public relations consequences, and the cleanup process was slow and costly. It also furthered a major decline in the public popularity of nuclear power, exemplifying for many the worst fears of nuclear technology, and, until the Chernobyl accident seven years later, was considered the world's worst civilian nuclear accident. No new nuclear plant has started construction since the event (in the U.S.), but several reactors started before the event have since become operational. Pathways from airborne radioactive contamination to man This is a list of notable accidents involving nuclear material. ... Evacuation can have several meanings: In wilderness first aid, evacuation is the transport of a seriously injured person out of the wilderness to the nearest point an ambulance can reach to take them to the hospital, or to the nearest emergency room. ... Buyers bargain for good prices while sellers put forth their best front in Chichicastenango Market, Guatemala. ... Public relations is the art and science of building relationships between an organization and its key publics. ... The nuclear power plant at Chernobyl prior to the completion of the sarcophagus. ...

Contents


Three Mile Island nuclear accident

Dick Thornburgh (foreground), Pennsylvania's governor at the time of the Three Mile Island reactor accident, and Harold Denton, from the NRC and President Carter's personal representative on the site, talk to the press about the situation.
Dick Thornburgh (foreground), Pennsylvania's governor at the time of the Three Mile Island reactor accident, and Harold Denton, from the NRC and President Carter's personal representative on the site, talk to the press about the situation.

The accident occurred in the TMI-2 reactor (the plant had two reactors; TMI-1 was down for refueling at the time) and had a number of primary causes, related both to technical malfunction and human error. It began when the plant's main feedwater pumps in the secondary non-nuclear cooling system failed at about 4:00 a.m. on March 28, 1979. This failure was due to either a mechanical or electrical failure in the condensation system and caused a reduction in feedwater flow which prevented the steam generators from removing heat. The auxiliary (backup) feedwater system had been inadvertently left valved-out after an earlier maintenance activity. First the turbine, then the nuclear reactor automatically shut down. Immediately, the pressure in the primary system (the nuclear portion of the plant) began to increase. In order to prevent that pressure from becoming excessive, the pressurizer relief valve (a valve located at the top of the pressurizer) opened. The valve should have re-closed when the pressure decreased by a small amount, but it did not. The only signals available to the operators showed the valve as being closed, but in fact only the signal to close the valve was sent; the system did not check that the valve was actually closed. The "positive feedback" lamp in the control room indicating the true position of the valve (a Pressure Operated Relief Valve, or PORV) was eliminated in original construction to save time and has been backfitted to all other similar plants. As a result of this design error, the valve remained open and caused the pressure to continue to decrease in the system. Governor Thornburgh (near) and Harold Denton[1] (behind) at the time of the Three Mile Island reactor accident. ... Governor Thornburgh (near) and Harold Denton[1] (behind) at the time of the Three Mile Island reactor accident. ... Categories: People stubs | 1932 births | U.S. Attorneys General | Governors of Pennsylvania ... The NRC, or Nuclear Regulatory Commission, is a United States government agency that was established by the Energy Reorganization Act in 1974, and was first opened January 19, 1975. ... Order: 39th President Term of Office: January 20, 1977–January 20, 1981 Preceded by: Gerald Ford Succeeded by: Ronald Reagan Date of birth: October 1, 1924 Place of birth: Plains, Georgia Date of death: Place of death: First Lady: Rosalynn Carter Political party: Democratic Vice President: Walter Mondale James Earl... Nuclear fuel is any material that can be consumed to derive nuclear energy, by analogy to chemical fuel that is burned to derive energy. ... A boiler feedwater pump is a specific type of pump used to pump water into a steam boiler. ... March 28 is the 87th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (88th in Leap years). ... This page refers to the year 1979. ... Steam generators are systems used to to convert water into steam from heat produced in a nuclear reactor core. ... In physics, heat is defined as energy in transit. ... WWII era steam turbine used for ship propulsion. ... Core of a small nuclear reactor used for research. ... The relief valve (also called a bypass valve) is a mechanism used to control or limit pressure or vacuum in a system by allowing the media to flow from an auxiliary passage, away from the main flow path. ...


It should be noted that the operators and emergency operating procedures (EOPs) did not recognize the accident as a classic LOCA (Loss of Coolant Accident) since they had no dependable instrumentation to indicate the loss of primary water or non-ambiguous reactor level indication (see Aftermath). A Loss of Coolant Accident (LOCA) is a mode of failure for a nuclear reactor; in a nuclear reactor, the results of a LOCA could be catastrophic to the reactor, the facility that houses it, and the immediate vicinity around the reactor. ... Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station consists of two nuclear reactors, each with its own containment building and cooling towers. ...


Meanwhile, another problem appeared elsewhere in the plant with the emergency feedwater system (the backup to the main feedwater). It had been tested 42 hours prior to the accident. As part of the test, a valve is closed and then reopened at the end of the test. But this time, through either an administrative or human error, the valve was not reopened. This prevented the emergency feedwater system from functioning during the accident. The valve was discovered closed about eight minutes into the accident. Once it was reopened, the emergency feedwater system began to work correctly, allowing cooling water to flow into the steam generators. This page may meet Wikipedias criteria for speedy deletion. ...


As the system pressure in the primary system continued to decrease, voids (areas where there is no water present) began to form in portions of the system other than the pressurizer. Because of these voids, the water in the system was redistributed and the pressurizer still had water available. The turbulence of this water blew out the stuck-open valve and caused the level indicator to think the pressurizer was full. Thus the level indicator, which tells the operator the amount of coolant capable of heat removal, incorrectly indicated the system was full of water. Therefore, the operator stopped adding water — by turning off the Emergency Core Cooling pumps, which had automatically come on. He was unaware that, because of the stuck valve, the indicator could, and in this instance did, provide false readings.


After almost eighty minutes of slow temperature rise, the primary loop pumps began to cavitate as steam, rather than water, began to pass through them. The pumps were shut down, and it was believed that natural circulation would continue the water movement. Steam in the system locked the primary loop, and as the water stopped circulating it was converted to steam in increasing amounts. About 130 minutes after the first malfunction, the top of the reactor core was exposed and the heat and steam drove a reaction involving hydrogen and radioactive gases with the zirconium nuclear control rod cladding. The quench tank (collecting the discharge from the PORV) overfilled, its relief diaphragm ruptured, and radioactive coolant began to leak out into the general containment building. At 6 a.m. there was a shift change in the control room. A new arrival noticed that the temperature in the holding tanks was excessive and used a backup valve to shut off the coolant venting, but around 250,000 US gallons (950 ) of coolant had already leaked from the primary loop. It was not until 165 minutes after the start of the problem that radiation alarms activated as contaminated water reached detectors — by that time the radiation levels in the primary coolant water were around 300 times expected levels, and the plant was seriously contaminated. Temperature is also the name of a song by Sean Paul. ... General Name, Symbol, Number hydrogen, H, 1 Chemical series nonmetals Group, Period, Block 1, 1, s Appearance colorless Atomic mass 1. ... Radioactive decay is the set of various processes by which unstable atomic nuclei (nuclides) emit subatomic particles. ... General Name, Symbol, Number zirconium, Zr, 40 Chemical series transition metals Group, Period, Block 4, 5, d Appearance silvery white Atomic mass 91. ... A nuclear control rod is removed from or inserted into the core of a nuclear reactor in order to increase or decrease the number of neutrons which will split further uranium atoms. ... A containment building, in its most common usage, is a steel or concrete structure enclosing a nuclear reactor. ... The gallon (abbr. ... The cubic meter (symbol m³) is the SI derived unit of volume. ...


At 7:00 AM a "Site Area Emergency" was declared. At 7:24 AM the incident was upgraded to a "General Emergency". Harrisburg radio station WKBO announced a problem with the plant at 8:25 AM. The Associated Press announced the general emergency at 9:00 AM.


It was still not clear to the control room that the primary loop water levels were low and that over half of the core was exposed (a LOCA). A group of workers took manual readings from the thermocouples and obtained a sample of primary loop water. Around seven hours into the emergency, new water was pumped into the primary loop. The backup relief valve was opened to reduce pressure. At around nine hours the hydrogen within the reactor building ignited and burned, but this was largely unnoticed. After almost sixteen hours the primary loop pumps were turned back on and the core temperature began to fall. A large part of the core had melted, and the system was still dangerously radioactive. Over the next week the steam and hydrogen were removed from the reactor using a recombiner and, more controversially, by venting straight to the atmosphere. It is estimated that a maximum of 13 million curies (480 petabecquerels) of radioactive noble gases were released by the event, though very little of the hazardous iodine-131 was released.[1] A nuclear meltdown occurs when the core of a nuclear reactor melts. ... Layers of Atmosphere (NOAA) Earths atmosphere is a layer of gases surrounding the planet Earth and retained by the Earths gravity. ... The curie (symbol Ci) is a former unit of radioactivity, defined as 3. ... The becquerel (symbol Bq) is the SI derived unit of radioactivity, defined as the activity of a quantity of radioactive material in which one nucleus decays per second. ... The noble gases are a chemical series. ... Iodine-131, also called radioiodine, is a radioisotope of iodine. ...


The molten fuel did not break through in a "China Syndrome" (see below). "Despite melting of about one-third of the fuel, the reactor vessel itself maintained its integrity and contained the damaged fuel."[2] China syndrome refers to the result of of a nuclear meltdown, from the humorously exaggerated and stupid notion that molten reactor material would burrow from the United States through the center of the earth and emerge in China, as popularized by the 1979 film, The China Syndrome. ...


For a full review of the incident and description of conditions, actions taken (and not taken) and effects on plant equipment and the environment, review the Rogovin Report[3] and the Kemeny Report.[4] John George Kemeny (Kemény János) (May 31, 1926–December 26, 1992), U.S. computer scientist and educator best known for co-developing the BASIC programming language in 1964 with Thomas Eugene Kurtz. ...


Aftermath

The full damage to the reactor core was not known for many years after the accident.

"The average radiation dose to people living within 10 miles of the plant was eight millirem, and no more than 100 millirem to any single individual. Eight millirem is about equal to a chest X-ray, and 100 millirem is about a third of the average background level of radiation received by U.S. residents in a year."[5] Image File history File links Color photograph of the Three Mile Island nuclear generating station, which suffered a partial meltdown in 1979. ... Image File history File links Color photograph of the Three Mile Island nuclear generating station, which suffered a partial meltdown in 1979. ...


Three Mile Island has been of interest to human factors engineers as an example of how groups of people react and make decisions under stress. There is general consensus that the accident was exacerbated by incorrect decisions made because the operators were overwhelmed with information, much of it irrelevant, misleading, or incorrect. As a result of the TMI-2 incident, nuclear reactor operator training has been changed. Before TMI, operator training focused on diagnosing the underlying problem; afterwards, operating training focused on reacting to the emergency by going through a standardized checklist to ensure that the core is receiving enough coolant under sufficient pressure. It is noteworthy that the Union of Concerned Scientists had called for the shutdown of Three Mile Island and 15 other nuclear power plants two months prior to the meltdown. It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Ergonomics. ... This picture shows an exaggerated expression of stress. ... The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) is an advocacy organization based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States. ...


In addition to the improved operating training, improvements in quality assurance, engineering, operational surveillance and emergency planning have been instituted. Improvements in control room habitability, "sight lines" to instruments, ambiguous indications and even the placement of "trouble" tags (some tags were covering important instrument indications during the accident) have been improved. Improved surveillance of critical systems, structures and components required for cooling the plant and mitigating the escape of radionuclides during an emergency were also implemented. In addition, each nuclear site must have an approved emergency plan which directs the evacuation of the public within a 10 mile Emergency Planning Zone (EPZ) to facilitate rapid notification and evacuation. This plan is rehearsed with federal and local authorities on a periodic basis to ensure that all groups work together quickly and efficiently.


U.S. President Jimmy Carter ordered a full investigation of the TMI incident. The Pennsylvania House of Representatives conducted its own investigation, which focused on the need to improve evacuation procedures. House investigators also visited the Three Mile Island site, including the Control Room. Many of the instruments viewed were marked with "error tags," explaining how the instrument was supposed to work, and how it actually functioned. A member of the investigating committee, State Rep. Mark B. Cohen of Philadelphia, said it would be "virtually impossible" for any Control Room operator to keep track of the many variations between the equipment's intended and actual functioning. For the submarine, see USS Jimmy Carter (SSN-23). ... The Pennsylvania House of Representatives is one of two co-equal houses of the Pennsylvania General Assembly, the legislature of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. ... Philadelphia is a village located in Jefferson County, New York. ...


There was also the psychological effect on the nation. Before the accident approximately seventy percent of the general public approved of nuclear power. After this accident, support for nuclear power across the country fell to about fifty percent, where it remained for decades. Recently public support for nuclear power has been on the rise, and the Bush administration has been particularly supportive of nuclear power, encouraging power companies to begin considering plans for the first new nuclear reactors in the United States in decades.[6] George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is the 43rd and current President of the United States and a former governor of Texas. ...


The 1979 TMI accident did not, however, initiate the demise of the U.S. nuclear power industry. As a result of post-oil-shock analysis and conclusions of overcapacity, 40 planned nuclear power plants had already been canceled between 1973 and 1979. No U.S. nuclear power plant had been authorized to begin construction since the year prior to TMI. Nonetheless, TMI added a clearly strong impact on this demise: Of 129 plants approved at the time of TMI just 53 of those not already operating were ever completed. Federal requirements became more stringent, local opposition became more strident, and construction times were vastly lengthened. Note that the two shortest nuclear power plant construction projects were in this same volatile period, River Bend and St. Lucie-2. Motto: E pluribus unum (1789 to 1956) (Latin: Out of Many, One) In God We Trust (1956 to present) Anthem: The Star-Spangled Banner Capital Washington, D.C. Largest city New York City Official language(s) None at federal level; English de facto Government • President • Vice President Federal Republic George... River Bend nuclear power station is a General Electric boiling water reactor on a 3,300 acre (13 km²) site in St. ... The twin nuclear reactors at St. ...

Viewed from the west, Three Mile Island currently uses only one nuclear generating station, TMI-1, which is on the left. TMI-2, to the right, has never been used after the disaster.
Viewed from the west, Three Mile Island currently uses only one nuclear generating station, TMI-1, which is on the left. TMI-2, to the right, has never been used after the disaster.

The TMI cleanup started in August 1979 and officially ended in December 1993 at a cost of around US$975 million. From 1985 to 1990 almost 100 tonnes of radioactive fuel were removed from the site. However, the contaminated cooling water that leaked into the containment building had seeped into the building's concrete, from which the radioactivity was basically impossible to remove. TMI-2 had been online only three months, but now had a ruined reactor vessel and the containment building was unsafe to walk in — it has since been permanently closed. Many similar Babcock and Wilcox reactors on order were canceled — in total, 51 American nuclear reactors were canceled from 1980 to 1984. Three Mile Island; public domain from http://phil. ... Three Mile Island; public domain from http://phil. ... 1993 (MCMXCIII) was a common year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar and marked the Beginning of the International Decade to Combat Racism and Racial Discrimination (1993-2003). ... The Babcock & Wilcox Company is a world leader in the design, engineering, manufacture, service and construction of power generation and pollution control systems and equipment for utilities and industries. ...


In the end, a few simple water level gauges on the reactor vessel (standard equipment on General Electric, Westinghouse and Combustion Engineering reactors) would have prevented the accident. The reliance on a single indicator, the level in the pressurizer (which was fooled by the turbulence caused by the open valve) essentially caused the meltdown. GE redirects here; for other uses, see GE (disambiguation). ... Westinghouse logo (designed by Paul Rand) The Westinghouse Electric Company, headquartered in Monroeville, Pennsylvania, is an organization founded by George Westinghouse in 1886. ... Combustion Engineering was a leading firm in the development of power systems in the United States in the late 20th century. ...


Unit 1, which had had its license temporarily suspended following the incident at Unit 2, was permitted to resume operations in 1985. General Public Utilities Corporation, the plant's owner, formed General Public Utilities Nuclear Corporation (GPUN) as a new subsidiary to own and operate the company's fleet of nuclear facilities, including Three Mile Island. The plant had previously been operated by Metropolitan Edison Company (Met-Ed), one of GPU's regional utility operating companies. In 1996, General Public Utilities shortened its name to GPU Inc. Three Mile Island Unit 1 was sold to AmerGen Energy Corporation, a joint venture between Philadelphia Electric Company (PECO), and British Energy, in 1998. In 2000, PECO merged with Unicom Corporation to form Exelon Corporation, which acquired British Energy's share of AmerGen in 2003, dissolving the company in the process. TMI Unit 1 is now owned and operated by Exelon Nuclear Inc., an Exelon Corp. subsidiary. British Energy plc, is the United Kingdoms primary nuclear power producer, operating seven Advanced Gas Cooled Reactor (AGR) stations, one Pressurised Water Reactor (PWR) site and one coal fired power plant. ...


Three Mile Island Unit 2 was too badly damaged and contaminated to resume operations. The reactor was gradually deactivated and mothballed in a lengthy process completed in 1993. Initially, efforts focused on the cleanup and decontamination of the site, especially the defueling of the damaged reactor. In 1988, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced that, although it was possible to further decontaminate the Unit 2 site, the remaining radioactivity had been sufficiently contained so as to pose no threat to public health and safety. Accordingly, further cleanup efforts were deemed unnecessary. The defueling process was completed in 1990, and the damaged reactor was removed and disposed of in 1993. General Public Utilities was legally obliged to continue to maintain and monitor the site, and therefore retained ownership of Unit 2 when Unit 1 was sold to AmerGen in 1998. GPU Inc. was acquired by First Energy Corporation in 2001, and subsequently dissolved. First Energy then contracted out the maintenance and administration of Unit 2 to AmerGen. Unit 2 has been administered by Exelon Nuclear since 2003, when Exelon Nuclear's parent company, Exelon, bought out the remaining shares of AmerGen, inheriting First Energy's maintenance contract.


The China Syndrome

It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with The_China_Syndrome. (Discuss)
Edward Teller as "the only victim of Three Mile Island" in his 1979 Wall Street Journal pro-nuclear ad., sponsored by Dresser Industries, the firm which had manufactured one of the defective valves which contributed to the accident.
Edward Teller as "the only victim of Three Mile Island" in his 1979 Wall Street Journal pro-nuclear ad., sponsored by Dresser Industries, the firm which had manufactured one of the defective valves which contributed to the accident.

The accident at the plant occurred a few days after the release of the movie The China Syndrome, which featured Jane Fonda as a newsanchor at a California TV station. In the film, a nuclear accident almost happens while Fonda's character and her cameraman are at a plant doing a series on nuclear power. She goes on to raise awareness of how unsafe the plant was. Coincidentally, there is a scene in which Fonda's character speaks with a nuclear safety expert who says that a meltdown could force an area "the size of Pennsylvania" to be evacuated. Also, the fictional near-accident in the movie stems from plant operators misunderstanding the amount of water within the core. Wikipedia does not have an article with this exact name. ... DVD cover The China Syndrome is a 1979 thriller film which tells the story of a reporter and cameramen who discover safety coverups at a nuclear power plant. ... Download high resolution version (1208x803, 494 KB)Shortly after the Three Mile Island reactor accident in 1979, the physicist Edward Teller was featured in a two-page ad by Dresser Industries proclaiming himself as the only victim of Three-Mile Island on account of his having a heart attack while... Download high resolution version (1208x803, 494 KB)Shortly after the Three Mile Island reactor accident in 1979, the physicist Edward Teller was featured in a two-page ad by Dresser Industries proclaiming himself as the only victim of Three-Mile Island on account of his having a heart attack while... Dresser Industries was a multinational corporation headquartered in Dallas, Texas, which provides a wide range of technology, products, and services used for developing energy and natural resources. ... DVD cover The China Syndrome is a 1979 thriller film which tells the story of a reporter and cameramen who discover safety coverups at a nuclear power plant. ... Jane Fonda, 2001 publicity photo Jane Seymour Fonda (born December 21, 1937) is an Academy Award-winning American actor, writer, producer, and political activist. ... A nuclear power station. ... Nuclear safety is a term which underscores and understates the danger implicit in the use of nuclear materials, and may be used to describe measures taken to prevent nuclear and radiation accidents. ...


Soon after the release of the film, Fonda began lobbying against nuclear power—the only actor in the film to do so. In an attempt to counter her efforts, the nuclear physicist Edward Teller ("father of the hydrogen bomb" and long-time government science advisor) himself lobbied in favor of nuclear power, and eventually the 71-year-old scientist suffered a heart attack, which he later blamed on Fonda: "You might say that I was the only one whose health was affected by that reactor near Harrisburg. No, that would be wrong. It was not the reactor. It was Jane Fonda. Reactors are not dangerous." (See Edward Teller for more information.) Rhetoric based on the movie is still used to debate for and against nuclear power. Edward Teller in 1958 as Director of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. ... The mushroom cloud of the atomic bombing of Nagasaki, Japan, in 1945 lifted nuclear fallout some 18 km (60,000 feet) above the epicenter. ... Edward Teller in 1958 as Director of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. ...


See also

Pathways from airborne radioactive contamination to man This article covers notable accidents involving nuclear and radioactive material. ... The nuclear power plant at Chernobyl prior to the completion of the sarcophagus. ... The Goiânia accident was an incident of radioactive contamination that killed several individuals and injured many others. ... On October 10, 1957, the graphite core of a British nuclear reactor at Windscale, Cumbria, caught fire releasing substantial amounts of radioactive contamination into the surrounding area. ...

Notes

  1.   J. Samuel Walker, Three Mile Island: A Nuclear Crisis in Historical Perspective (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2004), p. 231.
  2.   Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Special Inquiry Group, Three Mile Island : A report to the Commissioners and to the public (Washington, D.C.: Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Special Inquiry Group, 1980). [Aka “Rogovin report.”] Available at http://www.threemileisland.org/
  3.   ANS Public Information, available at http://www.ans.org/pi/matters/tmi/whathappened.html
  4.   President's Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island, The need for change, the legacy of TMI : report of the President's Commission on the Accident at Three Mile Island (Washington, D.C.: The Commission, 1979). [Aka “Kemeny Commission report.”] Available at http://www.threemileisland.org/
  5.   ANS Public Information, available at http://www.ans.org/pi/matters/tmi/whathappened.html
  6.   Three Mile Island shows US nuclear risks, rewards Jon Hurdle/Matthew Robinson http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060420/lf_nm/energy_nuclear_usa_dc_4

External links

Coordinates: 40.15506° N -76.72356° E Dickinson College is a private liberal arts college in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. ... Map of Earth showing lines of latitude (horizontally) and longitude (vertically); large version (pdf) The geographic (earth-mapping) coordinate system expresses every horizontal position on Earth by two of the three coordinates of a spherical coordinate system which is aligned with the spin axis of the Earth. ...


  Results from FactBites:
 
Three Mile Island (2992 words)
General Public Utilities Nuclear Corporation (GPUN): In January, 1982 operation of Three Mile Island Units 1 and 2 was divested from Met-Ed and vested in GPUN– a newly created subsidiary of GPU – as a means to disassociate the current actions of the company from those at the time of the accident.
Middletown, Pennsylvania: Town directly east of Three Mile Island; technically the plant is within the coundaries of the Borough of Middletown.
Three Mile Island: The island on which the nuclear plants (Three Mile Island Units 1 and 2) are located.
Three Mile Island - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2969 words)
Three Mile Island is the location of a U.S. nuclear power plant that, on March 28, 1979, suffered a partial core meltdown.
The Three Mile Island Nuclear Generating Station sits on an island in the Susquehanna River in Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, near Harrisburg, of area 3.29 km² (814 acres).
Three Mile Island Unit 2 was too badly damaged and contaminated to resume operations.
  More results at FactBites »


 

COMMENTARY     


Share your thoughts, questions and commentary here
Your name
Your comments
Please enter the 5-letter protection code

Want to know more?
Search encyclopedia, statistics and forums:

 


Lesson Plans | Student Area | Student FAQ | Reviews | Press Releases |  Feeds | Contact
The Wikipedia article included on this page is licensed under the GFDL.
Images may be subject to relevant owners' copyright.
All other elements are (c) copyright NationMaster.com 2003-5. All Rights Reserved.
Usage implies agreement with terms.