Depending on who where near the radiation poisoning?
The victims of radiation poisoning died day or weeks after the blasts.
The bomb was a plutonium implosion type. The blast was large and the radiation fallout is deadly. Most of the people that died were from radiation poisoning.
Marie Curie, She died of leukemia. See Related links.
Marie Curie died of radiation exposure in 1934 when nobody knew what it was until studies on her death reveled parts of the truth.
I believe it was around 120,00 in 2 seconds from the blast, and around 60,000 after the blast from radiation poisoning.
Two cities were destroyed and in 800,000 died in an instant. People still suffer from radiation poisoning.
Upon impact, 70,000 people were killed instantly and another 70,000 injured. At that time, Hiroshima had a population of around 255,000. It's believed that there were around 140,000 deaths in total. Some died during the actual bombing and some died later from radiation poisoning, cancer, or leukemia.
534,000 died from the explosion.3.5 million died from radiation over the course of 15 years.By January 3 2000, an roughly 7.6 million deaths were reported due to radiation poisoning caused by the disaster.
Probably not. Low levels of radiation would not linger for almost 60 years, and since the house was also not the source of the radiation, you should be just fine.
There were 90,000-166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000-80,000 in Nagasaki dead. Most of them died from radiation poisoning. The records doesn't show the cancer statistics.
90,000-166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000-80,000 in Nagasaki died. Most people suffered from radiation poisoning. Those death were extremely cruel.
Certainly Eben McBurney Byers (April 12, 1880 -- March 31, 1932) has died from radiation poisoning a while before Litvinenko, and even before Marie Curie. It's not clear, however, if he was the first.