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Sunflowers and MARIJUANA plants absorb Nuclear Radiation

punjabiboy

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The nuclear fallout from the tsunami forced nearly 80,000 people to evacuate their homes, not knowing if or when they may return. The 30 miles surrounding the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant has been left contaminated and relatively barren. Even more disturbing, reports of radioactive rice, beef, vegetables, milk, seafood, and even tea have been found more than 60 miles away from the site, outside the mandatory evacuation zone.

Koyu Abe, chief monk at the Buddhist Joenji temple has been distributing sunflowers and their seeds to be planted all over Fukushima. The plants are known to soak up toxins from the soil, and patches of sunflowers are now growing between buildings, in backyards, alongside the nuclear plant, and anywhere else they will possibly fit. At least 8 million sunflowers and 200,000 other plants have been distributed by the Joenji Buddhist temple. “We plant sunflowers, field mustard, amaranthus and cockscomb, which are all believed to absorb radiation,” Abe says.

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MARIJUANA IS ONE OF THE PLANTS THAT HAS BEEN PROVEN TO ELIMINATE NUCLEAR RADIATION AND WAS USED IN CLEANING CHERNOBYL SIMILAR TO THE SUNFLOWER PLANTS. THUS FOR THE RECENT NUCLEAR DISASTER IN JAPAN, CULTIVATION OF MARIJUANA IS A VIABLE ALTERNATIVE SINCE THIS PLANT ABSORBS THE RADIATION. IT IS ALSO VIABLE TO OTHER PLACES WITH REGARDS ON THE LAWS OF THE STATES AND THE COUNTRY THAT IS GOING TO BE PLANTED.
 
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In Fukushima Fields the Sunflowers Grow
In a project conducted by Fukushima City’s Water Bureau, 50 employees sowed 10,000 sunflower seeds in a field in Oguraji Ohirayama to see if the plants can decontaminate soil polluted by radiation from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant. The field, which is a reservoir site opened to the public as a park, stretches out six square kilometers (3.72 square miles) on a hill a kilometer away from the prefectural office in Fukushima city.
read more. Fukushima Grows Sunflowers to Help Absorb Radiation - Japan Real Time - WSJ
 
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"In February 1996, Phytotech, Inc., a Princeton, NJ-based company, reported that it had developed transgenic strains of sunflowers, Helianthus sp., that could remove as much as 95% of toxic contaminants in as little as 24 hours. Subsequently, Helianthus was planted on a styrofoam raft at one end of a contaminated pond near Chernobyl, and in twelve days the cesium concentrations within its roots were reportedly 8,000 times that of the water, while the strontium concentrations were 2,000 times that of the water. Helianthus is in the composite, or Asteraceae, family and has edible seeds. It also produces an oil that is used for cooking, in margarine, and as a paint additive. H. tuberosus was used by Native Americans as a carbohydrate source for diabetics.

In 1998, Phytotech, along with Consolidated Growers and Processors (CGP) and the Ukraine's Institute of Bast Crops, planted industrial hemp, Cannabis sp., for the purpose of removing contaminants near the Chernobyl site. Cannabis is in the Cannabidaceae family and is valuable for its fiber, which is used in ropes and other products. This industrial variety of hemp, incidentally, has only trace amounts of THC, the chemical that produces the "high" in a plant of the same genus commonly known as marijuana."
Planting Sunflowers & Marijuana To Clean Soil Radiation - IDigMyGarden Forums
 
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Japanese Ganja will be costlier than local ones...It wont be accepted by the babas in UP. RSS will oppose foren maal too...:cheesy:
 
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