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| Found in Fukushima Prefecture after March 11, 2011, a Gargantuan beet. Wikipedia. |
April 24, 2016 - FUKUSHIMA, JAPAN - The following excerpts were taken from the North American late-night radio talk show Coast to Coast AM. The show was aired on March 31, 2016 and dealt with Fukushima and nuclear issues.
Host George Noory talks with American investigative journalist and documentary film maker Linda Moulton Howe (emphasis added):
At 55:00 in
- Linda Howe, reporter: “What about signs of radiation sickness in animals and plants?”
- Arnie Gundersen, nuclear engineer who recently visited Fukushima Prefecture: … “We’ve also detected a lot of cases in the vegetables of something called gargantuanism. Shows up in the second generation and especially the third.”
At 1:14:30 in
Linda Moulton Howe, reporter: “Remember when [Arnie Gundersen] was referencing the gargantuanism — it appears to be increasing, as he said, in the third generation of plants. And who knows what’s going to happen in the fourth, fifth, and so forth. The trauma of seeing these gigantic… there is a photograph of this, what they call ‘gargantuan strawberry’ in Fukushima Prefecture…
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| Gargantuan strawberry in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan, after March 11, 2011. Wikipedia. |
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| Enlarged maple leaves from two trees of same species. Wikipedia. |
[There] is a gigantic beet — it is almost as big as the upper part of the man trying to hold the big beet. And then [there] is something that several people have reported in different parts of Fukushima — where trees of, in this case, it’s a photograph of [leaves] from two species of maple. And it shows a contrast from what a normal leaf should look like, to one that is, gosh, three times bigger. And they’re seeing more and more of this — people are reporting more and more of these abnormalities in the trees in the surroundings.
WATCH: Coast To Coast AM - Fukushima & Nuclear Issues.
- ENE News.



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