Relief as Australia finds lost radioactive capsule

A tiny but dangerously radioactive capsule fell off a truck along a remote stretch of desert highway in Western Australia last month

By AFP
February 01, 2023
A tiny but dangerously radioactive capsule fell off a truck along a remote stretch of desert highway in Western Australia last month.— Screengrab via The Guardian

A tiny but dangerously radioactive capsule, which fell off a truck along a remote stretch of desert highway in Western Australia last month, was found on Wednesday, authorities said.

"It's a good result, as I've said it's certainly a needle in a haystack that has been found, and I think West Australians can sleep better tonight," West Australian emergency services minister Stephen Dawson told reporters.

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Authorities scoured hundreds of kilometres of highway in search of the tiny capsule.

It was discovered at the side of a desert highway just south of the town of Newman— near the Outback mine it was transported from, the state's emergency services commissioner Darren Klemm said.

The six-day hunt came to an end after a search vehicle detected radiation while travelling along the highway, with authorities now working to safely remove the capsule before taking it to a secure location, Klemm said.

The solid, silver-coloured cylinder is smaller than a human fingernail— just eight millimetres by six millimetres— but the authorities say it contains enough Caesium-137 to cause acute radiation sickness.

It disappeared from a truck that drove to the suburbs of Perth from a remote mine 1,400 kilometres (870 miles) north of the state capital— farther than the distance from Paris to Madrid.

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