Read a book then.
[Blinking eyes thing]
Steam: http://steamcommunity.com/id/tzyon
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radiation lasts for ever. halflife etc. and besides, its in everything, everywhere.-Sh1fty- wrote:
How much longer will that reactor that blew in Chernobyl be irradiated? How long does radiation last anyway?
5 times longer!Uzique wrote:
which is like almost as long as god's earth has been around!
Thank you! See how easy that was? pfffUzique wrote:
a PhD? if you went to high-school you would know that radioactive isotopes have a half-life
i mean even the less-killer caesium will rot the area for like 300 years. as for all the plutonium in the topsoil and fresh-water aquifers?
i'd say the central reactor of chernobyl won't be inhabitable for 20,000 years
WTF I WAS SO IN FIRST-Sh1fty- wrote:
Thank you! See how easy that was? pfffUzique wrote:
a PhD? if you went to high-school you would know that radioactive isotopes have a half-life
i mean even the less-killer caesium will rot the area for like 300 years. as for all the plutonium in the topsoil and fresh-water aquifers?
i'd say the central reactor of chernobyl won't be inhabitable for 20,000 years
I was learning this junk last year, but I didn't pay much attention.
too busy praising the lawd and singing hallelujah, eh-Sh1fty- wrote:
Thank you! See how easy that was? pfffUzique wrote:
a PhD? if you went to high-school you would know that radioactive isotopes have a half-life
i mean even the less-killer caesium will rot the area for like 300 years. as for all the plutonium in the topsoil and fresh-water aquifers?
i'd say the central reactor of chernobyl won't be inhabitable for 20,000 years
I was learning this junk last year, but I didn't pay much attention.
Not to mention the air is so thin that most helicopters can't even get that high.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I knew they cannot be airlift, because I already knew about the high winds up there. I never even mentioned airlifting.
into the ground to rot and be eaten like the beasts we are-Sh1fty- wrote:
Uzique where do we go when we die?
Some helicopter landed there actually. I don't understand how it didn't get fked by high winds.PrivateVendetta wrote:
Not to mention the air is so thin that most helicopters can't even get that high.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I knew they cannot be airlift, because I already knew about the high winds up there. I never even mentioned airlifting.
And if they can, it's gonna take forever to get that much altitude.
cremated, buried, crucified?-Sh1fty- wrote:
Uzique where do we go when we die?
you were talking this whole time about saving people on everest-Sh1fty- wrote:
Some helicopter landed there actually. I don't understand how it didn't get fked by high winds.PrivateVendetta wrote:
Not to mention the air is so thin that most helicopters can't even get that high.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I knew they cannot be airlift, because I already knew about the high winds up there. I never even mentioned airlifting.
And if they can, it's gonna take forever to get that much altitude.
I'm sure something like an Mi26 could get up there and if it didn't make it at least the fking huge explosion would be cool amirite?
Maybe read what I said. MOST helicopters can't get up there, the ones Nepal operate to airlift people off Everest only go as high as base camp.-Sh1fty- wrote:
Some helicopter landed there actually. I don't understand how it didn't get fked by high winds.PrivateVendetta wrote:
Not to mention the air is so thin that most helicopters can't even get that high.-Sh1fty- wrote:
I knew they cannot be airlift, because I already knew about the high winds up there. I never even mentioned airlifting.
And if they can, it's gonna take forever to get that much altitude.
I'm sure something like an Mi26 could get up there and if it didn't make it at least the fking huge explosion would be cool amirite?
was an alouette III if my memory serves me well.PrivateVendetta wrote:
Maybe read what I said. MOST helicopters can't get up there, the ones Nepal operate to airlift people off Everest only go as high as base camp.-Sh1fty- wrote:
Some helicopter landed there actually. I don't understand how it didn't get fked by high winds.PrivateVendetta wrote:
Not to mention the air is so thin that most helicopters can't even get that high.
And if they can, it's gonna take forever to get that much altitude.
I'm sure something like an Mi26 could get up there and if it didn't make it at least the fking huge explosion would be cool amirite?
You get close to a service ceiling the climb rate goes down to next to nothing, it would take at least an hour to climb that high, more likely closer to 2. Not a helpful time frame.
Last edited by Trotskygrad (2010-12-13 19:20:25)
Saving living people...RTHKI wrote:
you were talking this whole time about saving people on everest-Sh1fty- wrote:
Some helicopter landed there actually. I don't understand how it didn't get fked by high winds.PrivateVendetta wrote:
Not to mention the air is so thin that most helicopters can't even get that high.
And if they can, it's gonna take forever to get that much altitude.
I'm sure something like an Mi26 could get up there and if it didn't make it at least the fking huge explosion would be cool amirite?
Remember not to walk on the grass:blacKOut: wrote:
For some reason, I would love to visit Pripyat and Chernobyl. I think seeing those places in person would be