Map shows spot with high level of radiation near Fukushima plant 20Aug11][ - 0 views
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The science ministry published a map on Friday on cumulative radiation estimates five months after the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant was crippled in March, showing a nearby town with a high level of radiation. In giving specific estimates for 50 locations in the no-entry zone for the first time, the ministry said cumulative radiation of 278 millisieverts was estimated for a location in the town of Okuma, 3 kilometers southwest of the troubled plant.
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The annual radiation exposure limit for ordinary people is 1 millisievert. The government has urged people living in areas around the plant where annual exposure is likely to exceed 20 millisieverts to evacuate.
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The estimates for the five-month period were varied, with several millisieverts of cumulative radiation for some locations even within the no-entry zone. The data would therefore be used as a guide when considering the lifting of the entry ban in the future, according to the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, which oversees the readings.
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The government is also considering allowing evacuees from areas within a 3-km radius of the plant to return home temporarily. Cumulative radiation over the one-year period from the start of the disaster is projected to reach between several millisieverts and over 500 millisieverts at the 50 locations within the no-entry zone.
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Outside the exclusion zone, cumulative radiation in the town of Namie, 22 km northwest of the plant, was estimated at 115 millisieverts over the five-month period, the highest among locations outside the zone and equivalent to 229 millisieverts over a 12-month period. The cumulative radiation map is based on readings taken at 4,283 locations, with a focus on Fukushima Prefecture