- K-65 residues
K-65 residues are the very
radioactive mill residues resulting from a uniquely concentrateduranium ore discovered before WW II inKatanga province (Shinkolobwe ) of theDemocratic Republic of the Congo (formerly called the Belgian Congo).This ore, dubbed "K-65", had a record 65% uranium content. It also held very high concentrations of
thorium andradium (and their decay products, includingradon gas) which are retained in the tailings (residues). The very high concentrations of these extremely toxic, long-livedradionuclide s present in these wastes prompted the National Academy of Sciences' National Research Council to categorize them as indistinguishable in hazard from High-Level Waste in its1995 report, "Safety of the High-Level Uranium Ore Residues at theNiagara Falls Storage Site ,Lewiston, New York " [http://www.nap.edu/books/NX007126/html/] . The K-65 ores were refined as a key part of theManhattan Project duringWorld War II at theLinde Ceramics Plant at Tonawanda, NY, and at theMallinckrodt Chemical Works inSt. Louis, MO ; these ores were the primary raw material source of ~80% of the uranium used in the Hiroshima bomb. The Mallinckrodt "K-65 residues" were later moved to a huge, new,Cold War uranium refinery atFernald, OH (outside ofCincinnati ) which commenced operations in1951 . The refining of "K-65" ore was continued at Fernald. The Linde "K-65 residues" were transported to a storage silo built at the federally appropriatedLake Ontario Ordnance Works site outside of Lewiston, NY, a short distance from Niagara Falls, NY.References
* [http://nuclear.bfn.org/glossary.htm Tonawanda Nuclear Site Info glossary]
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