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End State Methodology for Identifying Technological Needs for Environmental Management, with an Example from the Hanford Site Tanks

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End State Methodology for Identifying Technological Needs for Environmental Management, with an Example from the Hanford Site Tanks - National Research Council, and Division on Earth and Life Studies, and Commission on Geosciences Environment and Resources
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A major issue in the cleanup of this country's nuclear weapons complex is how to dispose of the radioactive waste resulting primarily from the chemical processing operations for the recovery of plutonium and other defense strategic nuclear materials. The wastes are stored in hundreds of large underground tanks at four U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) sites throughout the United States. The tanks contain hundreds of thousands of cubic meters of radioactive and hazardous waste. Most of it is high-level waste (HLW), some of it ...

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End State Methodology for Identifying Technological Needs for Environmental Management, with an Example from the Hanford Site Tanks 1999, National Academies Press, Washington, D.C.

ISBN-13: 9780309061834

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