Last updated 3:23AM ET
May 26, 2012
KPLU Local News
KPLU Local News
The Case of the Radioactive Rabbit
(2010-11-05)
A radioactive rabbit is not an unusual site on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. But one got very close to workers, which has ignited concern. Masteruk/Wikimedia
(KPLU) -

A radioactively contaminated rabbitwas caught and killed on the Hanford Nuclear Reservation near Richland in southeast Washington.

The U.S. Department of Energy says that's not unusual. Last year the agency caught 33 contaminated animals. But this rabbit was unusually close to workers and the public.

The bunny was found just a few miles outside of the city of Richland in Hanford's 300 Area. Todd Nelson is a spokesman for one of the federal contractors that clean up Hanford. He downplayed the incident.

Todd Nelson: "We have teams out there all the time that are monitoring. And in this particular case the material that we collected was all within a 100 yards of the potential source. And as I mentioned it was easily cleaned up, easily contained and very localized."

That "material" is contaminated rabbit droppings found on Oct. 14th. The theory is that the rabbit made an unfortunate decision to drink water out of puddles near or in a contaminated building that's being torn down.

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