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    What's this?
Steer clear of beer when nuclear bombs drop near
Scientists reexamine and reverse a 1955 study that claimed beer and soda would be safe to drink after the explosion of a nuclear bomb.

By

Life's Little Mysteries
Mon, Sep 24 2012 at 6:42 PM
 3

Related Topics:

Nuclear Energy, Beer
Glass of beer on desert sand

Photo: Shutterstock

Does anything refresh the palate after a nearby nuclear explosion quite like a nice, cold beer?
 
A 1955 test conducted by the U.S. government suggested canned or bottled beer would be safe to drink after a mushroom cloud subsided. But scientists today question that thinking.
 
Science historian Alex Wellerstein recently alerted the world to the results of Operation Teapot, a series of nuclear weapons tests conducted in Nevada in 1955 that, in part, tried to answer some practical questions about what we would eat and drink if the bomb came down. Within Operation Teapot was Project 32.2a, which examined "The Effects of Nuclear Explosions on Commercially Packaged Beverages." As the report on Project 32.2a explained, "packaged beverages, both beer and soft drinks, are so ubiquitous and already uniformly available in urban areas, it is obvious that they could serve as important sources of fluids."
 
During the tests, a wide range of canned and bottled beverages were positioned at distances between about 1,000 feet and 2 miles away from ground zero of two nuclear explosions.
 
When the dust had cleared, Wallenstein says the scientists found that only the bottles closest to ground zero of the explosions had much radioactivity, and even that radioactivity was "'well within the permissible limits for emergency use,' which is to say, it won’t hurt you in the short term."
 
The investigators were thorough enough to have some human tasters on hand to perform "immediate taste tests" on the beer, and they found that, though the beer that was very close to ground zero had a "slight flavor change," on the whole, the drinks were all right. Just to be sure, the scientists also had samples taste-tested by no less than five "qualified laboratories," which all concurred that the bombed beers would do fine in a pinch.
However, before anyone starts buying  bulk beer for their fallout shelters, they should know that the opinions of modern science are a potential buzzkill.
 
Reyco Henning, an assistant professor of physics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told Life's Little Mysteries that beer in cans and bottles would be far more dangerous after a nuclear explosion than, say, pure water in a plastic bottle.
 
"A nuclear explosion puts out a tremendous amount of neutrons and neutrons can transmute elements and make them radioactive," said Henning, who specializes in experimental particle astrophysics. "Generally heavier elements are more susceptible to this than light elements."
 
Metal cans, silicate bottles, and beer that may have picked up coppers and other contaminants in the brewing process are all much more susceptible to holding on to radiation than pure H20 in carbon-based plastic. But since most water sources are contaminated with radiation-drawing substances like chloride and potassium, Henning says the real problem would be finding truly pure water.
 
Still, if a bomb fell tomorrow, "I would go for the purest water you can make stored in a plastic bottle," said Henning. "Beer I would probably not drink under any circumstance."
 
Follow Life's Little Mysteries on Twitter @llmysteries. We're also on Facebook & Google+.
 
Related on Life's Little Mysteries:
  • Raise Your Glass: 10 Intoxicating Beer Facts
  • Why Beetles Have Sex with Beer Bottles: Q&A with Scientists
  • Beer Lubricated the Rise of Civilization, Study Suggests
     
This story was originally written for Life's Little Mysteries and is reprinted with permission here. Copyright 2012 Lifes Little Mysteries, a TechMediaNetwork company.
 
MNN tease photo of beer: Shutterstock
 

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Comments: 3
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obbopp's picture
obbopp Oct 06 2012 at 2:01 PM

"Mom... it's not the 4th of July... why all those bright pretty lights in the sky?"

"Shush ye varmint... duck and cover."

"Okay, Mom."

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anonymous
observer1 Sep 30 2012 at 3:30 AM
You say "scientists (plural) reexamine and reverse a 1955 study...", and later, "opinions (plural) of modern science are a potential buzzkill", whatever that means. You then explain how some assistant in Chapel Hill North Carolina, also known as the center of the universe for nuclear theory, has told "Life's Little Mysteries", also known as the Internet Hub of Science, surpassed only by Scientific American (HaHa) that he would prefer to drink pure distilled water when within 2 miles of a nuclear
.... More
blast. I think the Schlitz that has been carefully stored in my bombshelter since 1961 might need some bottled, I mean distilled, water to join it. Did they mention wine?
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anonymous
Richard H Sep 26 2012 at 12:55 PM
So the upshot here is to look for distilled water. The classic post nuclear water filter is a barrel with a outlet at the base. The barrel is filled with, starting at the bottom, couple of inches of gravel, couple of sand, couple of charcoal from wood not birckets, couple more of sand then about two feet of dirt. Run 10 or 20 gallon thru before you drink any of it, and be sure to boil it too. You could disinfect with bleach, but only if it was not exposed to radation or scented. Scented bleaches
.... More
are toxic in water.
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