The most severe forms of ocean pollution include oil spills, plastic pollution, and chemical waste discharge. These types of pollution can have devastating effects on marine life, ecosystems, and human health, making them critical issues that require urgent attention and action.
Eastern Europe
yes, most uranium is considered toxic and radioactive
Hurricane
The city of Los Angeles is generally considered to have America's worst air pollution problem. Most of California's metro areas have bad air pollution.
Some isotopes of cesium are radioactive and synthetic, as indicated in recent news reports about the Japanese nuclear reactor damaged by the recent severe earthquake/tsunami. (The radioactive cesium reported was formed by atomic fission of uranium and/or plutonium in the reactor.) However, most cesium is neither radioactive nor synthetic!
You think probable to artificial radioactive elements considered transition metals.
No, Barium has both stable and radioactive isotopes. Out of its 25 known isotopes, only 6 of them are considered radioactive. The most stable isotope of Barium is Barium-138, which is not radioactive.
Lake Karachay became one of the most polluted places on Earth due to the dumping of radioactive waste from nearby nuclear facilities. The lake served as a dumping ground for liquid nuclear waste and was not properly contained, leading to severe contamination and making it one of the most radioactive bodies of water in the world.
Most metals are stable and thus not radioactive.
Lithium is NOT the most active alkali metal. Francium is the most active but is available in such trace quantities and radioactive that for practical purposes it is Cesium that is considered most active.
The cause of most water pollution is from chemicals, oil spills, dyes, and anything factories dump into them. That is true, but it can depend on the body of water you're talking about. If it's a...