The task was daunting: find a tiny radioactive capsule that had fallen off a truck somewhere in Western Australia's vast outback sometime in January.
They were searching for Caesium-137's distinct signature against a backdrop of radioactive chatter, she said.
Sial and her colleague played the Stone Temple Pilots, a 90s rock band, softly in the background. Electronic music would have made it hard to hear the equipment, she said. Passing trucks, not radiation, were the main danger, said Sial. Road trains - trucks pulling multiple trailers that can stretch the length of two basketball courts - barrel across Western Australia, a sparsely populated state seven times larger than Germany.
Canada Latest News, Canada Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Missing radioactive capsule found in Western AustraliaAustralian authorities on Wednesday found a radioactive capsule that was lost in the vast Outback after nearly a week-long search along a 1,400 km (870-mile) stretch of highway, an emergency services official said.
Read more »
Missing radioactive capsule found on roadside in Western Australia after week-long searchThe device, used in Rio Tinto's mining operations, fell off the back of a truck as it was taken by a third-party specialist for repairs.
Read more »
Mining company sorry for losing radioactive device in Western AustraliaA mining corporation has apologized for losing a highly radioactive capsule over a 870-mile stretch of Western Australia.
Read more »
Mining company sorry for losing radioactive device in Western AustraliaA mining corporation has apologized for losing a highly radioactive capsule over a 870-mile stretch of Western Australia.
Read more »