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What Would Happen If You Were Actually Bitten By A Radioactive Animal

The Amazing Spider-Man, which retells the origins of Curiosity's wall-crawling superhero, hitting cinemas this calendar week. In the comic, a bite from a radioactive spider gives Peter Parker strength, agility and - in some versions of the story - the ability to shoot webbing out of his wrist. What really happens to someone bitten by a radioactive spider?

Not much. Or rather, not much aside from the usual symptoms of being fanged by an arachnid: itching, redness, soreness, and sometimes - depending on the type of spider - more than serious symptoms, including unconsciousness or death. The radioactivity, though, would be irrelevant. The world is awash in radiation. We're exposed to virtually 3 millisieverts of it a year, mostly from the sun and naturally occurring radioactive gases similar radon. That's not counting doses from medical procedures such as CT scans (vi mSv), mammograms (.4 mSv), or X-rays (.1 mSv); from airline travel (.01 mSv); or from smoking (53 mSv per yr). The amount of radiation contained in the venom from a unmarried spider bite would likely fall between .00003 and .000003 mSv - an inconsequential dose, about as much radiation as you'd absorb from eating a assistant, which contains the radioactive isotope Potassium-40.

Origins ... Spider-Man's first comic-book appearance, August 1962.

Origins ... Spider-Man'southward first comic-book appearance, August 1962.

Radioactive creatures do exist, notably in the forests surrounding the damaged Chernobyl nuclear reactor in the Ukraine, as well as in Sweden and Republic of finland, where plumes of radiation fell after the 1986 disaster. (Being irradiated, or exposed to radiations, is non the same as being radioactive, which ways that your torso contains radioactive thing.) But fifty-fifty a large radioactive creature, such as a wolf or bear, wouldn't accept enough radioactivity in its venom or saliva to pose a health risk (although the bite itself could still be mortiferous).

Even more common than radioactive animals are radioactive plants, which absorb nuclear fallout from the air or polluted groundwater. Though an insect bite won't give y'all radiation poisoning, consuming also many compromised flora and creature volition. In Belarus and the Ukraine, contaminated cattle eat "clean" hay until the concentration of hazardous isotopes in their bodies dips below the safety threshold. And a population of Swedish roe deer recently alarmed hunters when they showed in a higher place-average levels of radiations later on feeding on especially radiation-concentrating mushrooms.

Radioactive animals exhibit a higher than usual rate of birth abnormalities; birds near Chernobyl have been shown to accept smaller brains, and insects there are frequently born discolored. Withal, fifty-fifty the nearly stiff radioactive isotopes (unstable forms of strontium, plutonium, cesium, and iodine) are non capable of causing Marvel-grade mutations, as radiations proves far better at killing cells than at transfiguring them in some useful mode.

Reports of people being bitten by radioactive animals are few and far-between. Several years back, all the same, a man working to clean up the Chernobyl grounds was attacked past a radioactive stray dog. He was immediately hospitalised - for rabies.

Slate

Source: https://www.smh.com.au/entertainment/movies/what-happens-if-you-get-bitten-by-a-radioactive-spider-20120705-21iit.html

Posted by: blairroyes1951.blogspot.com

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