WO2022058765A1 - Natural nuclear waste management system - Google Patents

Natural nuclear waste management system Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2022058765A1
WO2022058765A1 PCT/IB2020/000712 IB2020000712W WO2022058765A1 WO 2022058765 A1 WO2022058765 A1 WO 2022058765A1 IB 2020000712 W IB2020000712 W IB 2020000712W WO 2022058765 A1 WO2022058765 A1 WO 2022058765A1
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Prior art keywords
nuclear waste
desert
management system
disposal
earth
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PCT/IB2020/000712
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French (fr)
Inventor
Ilija LAKIĊEVIĊ
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Lakiċeviċ Ilija
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Priority to PCT/IB2020/000712 priority Critical patent/WO2022058765A1/en
Publication of WO2022058765A1 publication Critical patent/WO2022058765A1/en

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G21NUCLEAR PHYSICS; NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
    • G21FPROTECTION AGAINST X-RADIATION, GAMMA RADIATION, CORPUSCULAR RADIATION OR PARTICLE BOMBARDMENT; TREATING RADIOACTIVELY CONTAMINATED MATERIAL; DECONTAMINATION ARRANGEMENTS THEREFOR
    • G21F9/00Treating radioactively contaminated material; Decontamination arrangements therefor
    • G21F9/28Treating solids
    • G21F9/34Disposal of solid waste
    • GPHYSICS
    • G21NUCLEAR PHYSICS; NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
    • G21FPROTECTION AGAINST X-RADIATION, GAMMA RADIATION, CORPUSCULAR RADIATION OR PARTICLE BOMBARDMENT; TREATING RADIOACTIVELY CONTAMINATED MATERIAL; DECONTAMINATION ARRANGEMENTS THEREFOR
    • G21F9/00Treating radioactively contaminated material; Decontamination arrangements therefor
    • G21F9/04Treating liquids
    • G21F9/20Disposal of liquid waste
    • G21F9/24Disposal of liquid waste by storage in the ground; by storage under water, e.g. in ocean
    • GPHYSICS
    • G21NUCLEAR PHYSICS; NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
    • G21FPROTECTION AGAINST X-RADIATION, GAMMA RADIATION, CORPUSCULAR RADIATION OR PARTICLE BOMBARDMENT; TREATING RADIOACTIVELY CONTAMINATED MATERIAL; DECONTAMINATION ARRANGEMENTS THEREFOR
    • G21F9/00Treating radioactively contaminated material; Decontamination arrangements therefor
    • G21F9/04Treating liquids
    • G21F9/20Disposal of liquid waste
    • G21F9/26Disposal of liquid waste by dilution in water, e.g. in ocean, in stream

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to a natural nuclear waste manage- ment system and, more specifically, it relates to the natural nuclear waste man- agement system for the permanent and safe disposal of nuclear waste in the world’s deserts thus enabling fulfillment of their necessary useful natural pur- pose which is the creation on the earth’s surface the few feet of decayed soil, atmosphere and water necessary for organic life.
  • Integral Used Fuel Management System that in- cludes all facets of storing, recycling and disposal. Used nuclear fuel which is a solid material is safely stored at nuclear plant sites until recycling of it is done and the unusable end product placed in a deep geologic repository. It is be- lieved that under any used fuel management scenario, disposal of high-level ra- dioactive byproducts in a permanent geologic repository is necessary.
  • the present invention overcomes all deficiencies of the prior meth- ods discussed above. It is an object of the present invention to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which permanently and safely solves the challenge of nuclear waste.
  • a still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which conforms to Nature’s purposeful way of distribution of radioactive elements in the earth’s crust.
  • a further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nu- clear waste management system which buries nuclear waste in small quantities into the large areas of the world’s deserts.
  • Next object of this invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which enables the explosive power of the small quantitiesof the nuclear waste to destroy the desert’s sand and to provide pressure condi- tions for the creation of different gases, so that from two of them (hydrogen and oxygen) water will be created underneath the desert’s surface.
  • Next object of this invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will on the desert’s surface finally provide humus for soil necessary for organic life.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which enables reforesting of world’s vast deserts with date palms and carpeting them with verdure.
  • a still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will end dust storms forever and add materially to the world food supply.
  • a still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will enables the releasing of enormous amounts of oxygen into earth’s atmosphere.
  • a still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will reverse earth’s negative climate changes and help to rebalance the earth's eco systems.
  • a still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which enables the creation of millions of new work places worldwide.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which turns the challenge of nuclear wastes into great GOOD for this civilization.
  • a natural nuclear waste management system for disposing nuclear waste in the world’s deserts is disclosed by the present invention.
  • the natural nuclear waste management system includes the steps of placement of very small quantities of nuclear low, middle and high level waste on such depths that there is no leakage of radioactive radiation to the surface of a desert, what must be proved experimentally on a site by direct measurements of the safe depths.
  • Mutual horizontal distances between the small quantities of the nuclear waste should be equal to the safe depths of their placement under the desert’s sur-faces.
  • Distribution of nuclear waste into the desert sand over vast desert’s area of thousands of miles should be done either by plowing very deep furrows or by using a drilling technique.
  • the system provides conformity with Nature’s pur-poseful way of distribution of radioactive elements in earth’s crust so that no leakage of the radioactive radiation to the surface of a desert can occur.
  • FIGURE 1 Schematic view of distribution of the very small quantities of nuclear waste over the volume of desert sand in accordance with this inven- tion: d - safe depth at which the very small quantities of nuclear waste (*) are placed, h - mutual horizontal distances between the very small quantities of nu- clear waste.
  • the present invention relates to a natural system for permanent and safe nuclear waste management.
  • the natural nuclear waste management sys-tem of the present invention for disposal Of nuclear waste in world’s deserts essentially includes distribution of very small quantities of nuclear waste deep into the desert sand over vast desert areas either by plowing very deep furrows and placing very small quantities of nuclear waste at the very bottom of the furrows or by using a drilling technique to perform the same task.
  • the system is in con-formity with Nature’s way of distribution of radioactive elements into the earth’s crust.
  • the small quantities of nuclear waste and the safe depths of their place- ment into the sand are so experimentally determined that their radioactive radiation cannot reach the desert surface and cannot leak.
  • Nuclear power is GOOD because there was a need for peace, bal- ance and energy on this planet and that is why nuclear power appeared to bring that good for the humankind.
  • Nuclear waste as a byproduct of nuclear power must be also good and purposeful. The challenge is how to find its good and purposefulness and turn it into great benefits.
  • the earth is a dying cell thrown off from the sun. It cannot maintain its spherical form. It is expanding at its equator and flattening at the poles and cannot keep in balance with its system by remaining on the plane of the sun’s equator. It is in the very early stages of preparing to throw off rings. The growth of deserts around its equator is the first early stage of that period. The earth’s deserts are the first dying parts of the earth’s body which will be thrown off in form of rings from the plane of its equator.
  • Uranium content of the ore is often between only 0.1 % and 0.2% and that is why large amounts of ore have to be mined to get at the uranium - tons of harmless rock must be condensed to ounces of free uranium. The same is with all other radioactive metals. It is good and healthful for us to sit upon a great granite boulder with the sun shining warmly upon us. That boulder contains following metals: 0.0004% (fourteen ounces) of uranium, 0.0009% (two pounds) of thorium, 0.5% titanium, 0.09% manganese, 0.035% chromium, 0.02% nickel, 0.005% tung- sten, 5% iron and 8% aluminum.
  • the earth breathes in that food and breathes it out as oxygen, which is poison to the ground, however, the very water we drink, the air we breathe, and the food we eat, comes from the dead and decaying body of this planet and every living body which dies and is returned to the earth, recharges the earth with renewed life.
  • the radioactive metals are giving out their quick death to the rocks in which they are embedded for the purpose of expanding the rocks in which they are embedded into the soil and water which in turn births life. Purposeful position of free radioactive metal enables them to bom- bard the infertile, dry, hot rocks of Nature to yield pairs of bodies for making or- ganic life possible on this planet. Water, oxygen, humus and the necessary car- bohydrates of life are created by the exploding metallic bullets of the dying ele- ments as they assist dense elements to die, but if they also project their death /-into less dense bodies, such as animal or human tissues, those lesser solids and the gases of their atmosphere will again be assisted in their desire to ex- pand, which is inherent in all matter.
  • Dis-posal of nuclear waste in world’s deserts essentially includes distribution of very small quantities of nuclear waste deep into the desert sand over vast areas (thousands of miles) of MANY deserts either by plowing very deep furrows and placing very small quantities of nuclear waste at the very bottom of the furrows or by using a drilling technique to perform the same task. This way is in con-formity with Nature’s way of distribution of radioactive elements into the earth’s crust.
  • the amounts of small quantities of nuclear waste and the safe depths of their placement into the sand must be so experimentally determined that their radioactive radiation cannot reach the desert surface and cannot leak. Obvi-ously these parameters are different for low, middle and high level nuclear waste.
  • the fertile soil on desert’s surfaces can be used for agriculture pur- poses for production of healthy food mostly in the areas where food is most needed now.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • High Energy & Nuclear Physics (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Biodiversity & Conservation Biology (AREA)
  • General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Ocean & Marine Engineering (AREA)
  • Oceanography (AREA)
  • Sustainable Development (AREA)
  • Processing Of Solid Wastes (AREA)

Abstract

A natural nuclear waste management system and the method for the permanent and safe disposal of nuclear waste in the world's deserts, by distributing all nuclear waste deep into the sand in very small quantities over vast thousands of miles desert's areas, has been discovered and proposed. The distribution will be done either by plowing very deep furrows for thousands of miles and placing very small quantities of nuclear waste at the very bottom of the furrows or by using a drilling technique to perform the same task. The safe depths where small amounts of nuclear waste should be placed must be determined experimentally so that no leakage of the radioactive radiation to the surface of a desert can occur. Bringing nuclear waste underground into its natural proper place deep into the desert sand and distributing it in very small amounts over vast desert areas, will enable the nuclear waste to fulfill its necessary useful purpose, which is preparing the soil for organic life oxygen dependent life to live by causing underground countless billions of microscopic explosions within the desert's sand to release water and create fertile soil (humus,nitrogen, carbon and oxygen) for organic life and other necessities for vegetation and human life. This natural nuclear waste management system enables promotion of the Creator's supreme principle that there is GOOD in everything and turns over this "negative" precept into following great GOOD for this civilization: 1. Integration of all nuclear waste (low, middle and high level) into natural life cycle in a manner that the problem of nuclear waste is solved FOREVER with 100% efficiency, 2. Rebalance of the earth's atmosphere and prevention of the possible inevitable climate catastrophe, 3. Reestablishment of the natural level of oxygen in air and waters, 4. Creation of new food sources worldwide, especially in regions where hunger is the main problem and 5. Creation of millions of new work places worldwide.

Description

NATURAL NUCLEAR WASTE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to a natural nuclear waste manage- ment system and, more specifically, it relates to the natural nuclear waste man- agement system for the permanent and safe disposal of nuclear waste in the world’s deserts thus enabling fulfillment of their necessary useful natural pur- pose which is the creation on the earth’s surface the few feet of decayed soil, atmosphere and water necessary for organic life.
2. Description of the Related Art
The management of nuclear waste is a pressing challenge facing most of the industrialized world and one of the major factors limiting use of nu- clear power as a widespread energy source. Because of the potential health, environmental and safety concerns, there is urgent need for a safe, permanent and cost-effective method of nuclear waste management, in order to keep these hazardous materials out of the environment - out of the air we breathe and out of our drinking water and food supplies, because unbelievably small - often in- visible - amounts can contaminate large areas.
During the last a few decades many solutions have been proposed, numerous methods and devices have been developed and are now in use which allow just temporary storage of nuclear wastes and the problem is still not solved in a manner which would avoid burdening future generations of mankind with the entire problem of a safe and permanent management of ever growing volume of nuclear waste they had no part in creating.
Potentially hazardous nuclear waste is currently stored at nuclear power plant sites in steel-lined, concrete pools or basins filled with water or in massive, airtight steel or concrete-and-steel canisters. For disposal of nuclear waste several methods have been proposed: disposal by burying the nuclear waste material either in the earth or at sea (U.S. Pat. No. 3,986,977 to Gablin), disposal by placing and sealing the waste in bore holes made in tectonic plates in the subduction zone and adjacent the non-descending earth crust where the tectonic plate and waste descend into the central region of the earth (U.S. Pat. No. 4,178,109 to Krutenat), disposal by placing nuclear waste within containers and depositing the containers within active volcanoes containing molten lava so that the containers and waste sink into the lava and are dissolved therein, thereby diluting the waste to a harmless level (U.S. Pat. No. 4,738,564 to Bot- tillo), disposal of nuclear waste within deep ocean pelagic sediment (U.S. Pat. No. 5,733,066 to Myers), disposal of nuclear waste in underground rock for- mations (U.S. Pat. No. 5,850,614 to Crichlow), disposal of nuclear waste using multilateral and horizontal boreholes in deep isolated geologic basins (U.S. Pat. No. 6,238,138 to Crichlow), disposal by dropping the containers filled with nu- clear waste materials into the sea in the path of an undersea volcano which is pouring lava onto the sea bed (U.S. Pat. No. 6,846,967 to Altersitz), disposal of nuclear waste by placing the waste into specially designed modules and launch the modules into space using the space shuttle, disposal by burial the waste in deep vertical wells which will be sealed with cement or mud, disposal by burying the waste in the polar ice caps whereby the great masses of ice could enclose and isolate the radioactive material and nuclear waste disposal by locking it up in glazed bricks.
There is so-called Integral Used Fuel Management System that in- cludes all facets of storing, recycling and disposal. Used nuclear fuel which is a solid material is safely stored at nuclear plant sites until recycling of it is done and the unusable end product placed in a deep geologic repository. It is be- lieved that under any used fuel management scenario, disposal of high-level ra- dioactive byproducts in a permanent geologic repository is necessary.
The common feature of all these methods is that they are not a safe, permanent solution for long-term nuclear waste management, since with time radioactive metals will destroy any kind of casing causing the possible contami- nation of the organic life cycle on earth, as well as destroying granite and other rocky formations. It is a slow process but future generations would be the even- tual sufferers from it. Therefore, an urgent need still exists for a safe and permanent dis- posal of nuclear waste.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention overcomes all deficiencies of the prior meth- ods discussed above. It is an object of the present invention to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which permanently and safely solves the challenge of nuclear waste.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a natural nu- clear waste management system which includes a permanent and safe solution for all levels of nuclear waste, low, middle and high.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which conforms to Nature’s purposeful way of distribution of radioactive elements in the earth’s crust.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nu- clear waste management system which buries nuclear waste in small quantities into the large areas of the world’s deserts.
Next object of this invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which enables the explosive power of the small quantitiesof the nuclear waste to destroy the desert’s sand and to provide pressure condi- tions for the creation of different gases, so that from two of them (hydrogen and oxygen) water will be created underneath the desert’s surface.
Next object of this invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will on the desert’s surface finally provide humus for soil necessary for organic life. Another object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which enables reforesting of world’s vast deserts with date palms and carpeting them with verdure. A still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will end dust storms forever and add materially to the world food supply.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will enables the releasing of enormous amounts of oxygen into earth’s atmosphere.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which will reverse earth’s negative climate changes and help to rebalance the earth's eco systems.
A still further object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which enables the creation of millions of new work places worldwide.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a natural nuclear waste management system which turns the challenge of nuclear wastes into great GOOD for this civilization.
A natural nuclear waste management system for disposing nuclear waste in the world’s deserts is disclosed by the present invention. The natural nuclear waste management system includes the steps of placement of very small quantities of nuclear low, middle and high level waste on such depths that there is no leakage of radioactive radiation to the surface of a desert, what must be proved experimentally on a site by direct measurements of the safe depths. Mutual horizontal distances between the small quantities of the nuclear waste should be equal to the safe depths of their placement under the desert’s sur-faces. Distribution of nuclear waste into the desert sand over vast desert’s area of thousands of miles should be done either by plowing very deep furrows or by using a drilling technique. The system provides conformity with Nature’s pur-poseful way of distribution of radioactive elements in earth’s crust so that no leakage of the radioactive radiation to the surface of a desert can occur. The foregoing and other objects, features, advantages and outstand- ing characteristics of the system will become apparent from the following de- tailed description of the invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURE 1 : Schematic view of distribution of the very small quantities of nuclear waste over the volume of desert sand in accordance with this inven- tion: d - safe depth at which the very small quantities of nuclear waste (*) are placed, h - mutual horizontal distances between the very small quantities of nu- clear waste. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a natural system for permanent and safe nuclear waste management. The natural nuclear waste management sys-tem of the present invention for disposal Of nuclear waste in world’s deserts essentially includes distribution of very small quantities of nuclear waste deep into the desert sand over vast desert areas either by plowing very deep furrows and placing very small quantities of nuclear waste at the very bottom of the furrows or by using a drilling technique to perform the same task. The system is in con-formity with Nature’s way of distribution of radioactive elements into the earth’s crust. The small quantities of nuclear waste and the safe depths of their place- ment into the sand are so experimentally determined that their radioactive radiation cannot reach the desert surface and cannot leak.
There is nothing except GOOD in all the universe, for Creator is LOVE and this universe is founded upon LOVE. Every action and its reaction in Nature must be in balance with each other in order to carry out the purposeful intent of the Creator.
Love is expressed by action, means balanced fulfillment of its own law of equal giving and regiving. That is the principle upon which this purposeful universe is founded. That which purposefully fulfills the law is GOOD. Every ac-tion of Man, likewise, which is founded upon love is a fulfillment of the law, and is GOOD. All things on earths and heavens of this divided universe of Creator’s recorded thoughts are GOOD because Creator’s thoughts are GOOD. We may be perfectly willing to believe this statement as abstract truth but belief in it with- out knowing will not make us strong. We must KNOW, for knowledge alone makes us strong to take all things good since every effect is divided into its op- posite effect, and EACH of the pair is EQUAL to the other, each equally GOOD.
Knowledge of this Universal Law gives us courage to transform the greatest defeat which ever threatened us into our greatest achievement [1-4], That is my philosophy by means of which I met the challenge of nuclear waste management enriched by the knowledge that it is a GOOD experience and that nuclear power plants are purposeful and bring GOOD into the world.
Nuclear power is GOOD because there was a need for peace, bal- ance and energy on this planet and that is why nuclear power appeared to bring that good for the humankind. Nuclear waste as a byproduct of nuclear power must be also good and purposeful. The challenge is how to find its good and purposefulness and turn it into great benefits.
The earth is a dying cell thrown off from the sun. It cannot maintain its spherical form. It is expanding at its equator and flattening at the poles and cannot keep in balance with its system by remaining on the plane of the sun’s equator. It is in the very early stages of preparing to throw off rings. The growth of deserts around its equator is the first early stage of that period. The earth’s deserts are the first dying parts of the earth’s body which will be thrown off in form of rings from the plane of its equator.
All radioactive metals in Nature are distributed UNDERGROUND in VERY SMALL QUANTITIES over VERY LARGE VOLUMES. For example, the
Uranium content of the ore is often between only 0.1 % and 0.2% and that is why large amounts of ore have to be mined to get at the uranium - tons of harmless rock must be condensed to ounces of free uranium. The same is with all other radioactive metals. It is good and healthful for us to sit upon a great granite boulder with the sun shining warmly upon us. That boulder contains following metals: 0.0004% (fourteen ounces) of uranium, 0.0009% (two pounds) of thorium, 0.5% titanium, 0.09% manganese, 0.035% chromium, 0.02% nickel, 0.005% tung- sten, 5% iron and 8% aluminum. All of its radiations are good, for it is in normal balance with the pulsation frequencies of every cell in our bodies. When radio-active elements are in their own environment underground or distributed in rocks they are vitally necessary there where they are serving a necessary pur-pose to benefit of man. Now if we “bombard” that 100 ton boulder and take it all apart and then sit upon those small amounts of uranium and thorium we will soon die from the explosions caused in our body cells.
Our every in-breath charges us with power to live, and every out-breath is death. That means that we are perpetually living and dying thirty or forty times a minute. The fact is that whatever lives in us is not a poison to us, but whatever of our own bodies which does not live WILL POISON US. We breathe in living oxygen which comes to us from the earth and its foliage. It dies in us and we breathe out a deadly poison known as carbon dioxide. That carbon dioxide is not poison to the ground, however It is food to the ground. The earth breathes in that food and breathes it out as oxygen, which is poison to the ground, however, the very water we drink, the air we breathe, and the food we eat, comes from the dead and decaying body of this planet and every living body which dies and is returned to the earth, recharges the earth with renewed life.
Water and soil are decayed and dying rock. They are, literally, dead rocks. Out of death in Nature life springs, and when life above ground is dead it gives new life to the death of earth. This is such a fundamental part of the pro-cess of Nature by which life and death interchange with each other to make death live and to make life die. The moment a peach in the dish on our table be-comes over ripe we will see fruit flies hovering over it which were born from it, just as millions of microbes and other primitive life forms are born in our living bodies, and more complex ones will be born from our dead bodies. Every farmer must put death under his ground (animal manure, fertilizer) in order to reap life above. Life breathe-in life in order to breathe-out death, whereas death breathe-in death in order to breathe-out life!
What is the difference between the great bare rock mountains of the West and the eastern mountains, such as the Blue Ridge, White Mountains Catskills? The western “lifeless” mountains are 55-80 million years old, as op- posed to the eastern mountains which are 400 million years old and which are covered with very deep soil, covered with trees, and abundant with waterfalls and brooks. Obviously much longer time period enabled radioactive elements -from underground to make possible organic life to flourish upon the eastern mountains.
All things in Nature have their proper placement and use. The highly explosive nature of the radioactive metals is purposeful since that high and quick explosive power is needed in Nature to assist in the decay and death of the slow dying rocky formations which first constitute the bodies of new planets. Radiation is the normal death principle. Every thing in Nature dies normally slowly radiating its heat. Because of their very high radiation energy, radioactive elements cause very quick expansion and very quick death of anything they come in contact with. But they would not harm us in the slightest if we slept upon the ground above them. They will not kill if left where Nature put them to perform the beneficial service intended of them. They are all good in their place, in fact they help to create the very water we drink and make humus for the soil, which give us food. The radioactive metals are giving out their quick death to the rocks in which they are embedded for the purpose of expanding the rocks in which they are embedded into the soil and water which in turn births life. Purposeful position of free radioactive metal enables them to bom- bard the infertile, dry, hot rocks of Nature to yield pairs of bodies for making or- ganic life possible on this planet. Water, oxygen, humus and the necessary car- bohydrates of life are created by the exploding metallic bullets of the dying ele- ments as they assist dense elements to die, but if they also project their death /-into less dense bodies, such as animal or human tissues, those lesser solids and the gases of their atmosphere will again be assisted in their desire to ex- pand, which is inherent in all matter. Animal and vegetable life is dependent upon the upper few feet of the earth’s crust to live. The soil must have humus, nitrogen, carbonic gas, oxy- gen and water. These so-called deadly radioactive poisons are preparing the soil for oxygen dependent life to live by causing countless billions of micro- scopic explosions in the rock formations underground to release water and other necessities for human life and vegetation. That is all GOOD. In their proper place in Nature they are fulfilling their necessary useful purposes.
In order to find good in the nuclear waste challenge we understand now that we MUST copy the way Nature deals with nuclear elements. That means two things: first, we must bring all nuclear waste back into earth, and second, we must distribute all nuclear waste in small quantities over huge vol- umes of earth’s crust.
But before we start re-distribution of all nuclear waste back into earth, we must find the most appropriate way of re-distribution and the most appropri- ate place for it. In order to find out the most suitable place let us be reminded what is planet earwh and how she came into being.
According to the general principle of creation of matter all matter is integrating by compressing light rings via poles and disintegrating by throwing off light rings from the equatorial planes. The same is with our sun which is dis- integrating by throwing off from its equatorial plane series of four light rings (ac- cording to the octave principle of creation). Last series of four light rings thrown off by our sun are the four planets nearest to the sun: Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. We can say that the earth is a dying cell thrown off from the sun. It cannot maintain its spherical form. It is flattening at the poles and cannot keep in balance with its system by remaining on the plane of the sun’s equator. It is in the very early stages of preparing to throw off more rings such as its first one which has wound up becoming a moon. The growth of deserts around its equa- tor is the first early stage of that period. Mars has grown very much older. It still has water but oxygen-dependent life is nearing its end upon it. Deserts take up a large area of it and it is more oblate than the earth. It is obvious that the deserts of the world offer the only chance to get rid of radioactive waste because it is most easy to bury the nuclear waste into the desert’s sand in order to have beneficial effects as fast as possible. Dis-posal of nuclear waste in world’s deserts essentially includes distribution of very small quantities of nuclear waste deep into the desert sand over vast areas (thousands of miles) of MANY deserts either by plowing very deep furrows and placing very small quantities of nuclear waste at the very bottom of the furrows or by using a drilling technique to perform the same task. This way is in con-formity with Nature’s way of distribution of radioactive elements into the earth’s crust. The amounts of small quantities of nuclear waste and the safe depths of their placement into the sand must be so experimentally determined that their radioactive radiation cannot reach the desert surface and cannot leak. Obvi-ously these parameters are different for low, middle and high level nuclear waste. Namely, very small quantities of nuclear low, middle and high level waste are placed on such depths that there is no leakage of radioactive radiation to the surface of a desert, what must be proved experimentally on a site by direct measurements of the safe depths. Mutual horizontal distances between the small quantities of the nuclear waste should be equal to the safe depths of their placement under the desert’s surfaces. ONLY in this way it might be possible to save more of our atmos- pheric damage. Otherwise, we will have no atmosphere in time.
By doing so we will enable the nuclear waste to perform the same work as it’s been doing for millions of years with the earth’s rocks: by slowly de-stroying desert’s sand the pressure conditions will be creating the perfect con- ditions for the generation of five elements (carbon, silicon, oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen) which are essential for the organic life and creation of water which will gradually provide fertile soil in the upper few feet of the earth’s crust (made 98.5% of these five elements) enabling vegetable life to grow up and to blossom. In this way the world’s deserts will be regenerating forests with date palms and carpeting with verdure causing enormous amounts of oxygen to be releas-ing into the earth’s atmosphere which will contribute to stopping earth’s nega-tive climate changes and help to rebalance the earth’s eco systems This green blanket will end dust storms from deserts forever.
The fertile soil on desert’s surfaces can be used for agriculture pur- poses for production of healthy food mostly in the areas where food is most needed now.
Finally, it is obvious that this huge undertaking will create millions of new work places worldwide which is of the utmost importance for the whole civi- lization.
Because of the big difference between desert’s sand and hard rocks the expected effects of the nuclear waste in deserts would be visible within a few years.
This concept is the ONLY safe way for us to get rid of nuclear waste and to solve that problem forever. There is NO other solution. There must be beneficial effects and the world deserts are the ONLY chance for the safe solu- tion of the nuclear waste problem forever! Does it matter if the beneficial effects would appear in five years or in twelve years or in twenty years?
References Cited
1. Ilija Lakicevic, ""Aton" True Cell, Atom and Particle Concept", In- ternational Journal of Science and Research (IJSR), https://ijsr.net/archive/ v8i10/show_abstract.php?id=ART20201755, Volume 8 Issue 10, October 2019, 388 - 395;
2. Walter Russell: “The Universal One” Edited by Louise Russell, UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY Swannanoa, Waynesboro, Vir- ginia;
3. Walter Russell: “The Secret of Light”, Third Edition, UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY, FORMERLY THE WALTER RUSSELL FOUNDATION SWANNANOA, WAYNESBORO, VIRGINIA 22980; 4. Walter and Lao Russell: “Atomic Suicide?” Copyright 1957, 3rd EDITION: 304 Pages, ISBN: 978-1-879605-11-4.

Claims

Claims I claim:
1. A natural management system for permanent and safe disposal of nuclear waste in the world’s deserts comprising the steps of: a) disposal of nuclear waste by placing very small quantities of nu- clear waste deep into the sand, b) distribution of nuclear waste either by plowing very deep furrows and placing very small quantities of nuclear waste at the very bottom of the fur- rows or by using a drilling technique to perform the same task, and c) distribution of nuclear waste over vast desert’s areas of thousands of miles.
2. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claim
1 wherein said both very small quantities of nuclear waste and depths of their placement into the sand are so adjusted that radioactive radiation cannot leak and cannot reach the desert surface.
3. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claim
1 wherein said very small quantities of nuclear low, middle and high level waste are placed on such depths that there is no leakage of radioactive radia-tion to the surface of a desert, what must be proved experimentally on a site by direct measurements of the safe depths. Mutual horizontal distances between the small quantities of the nuclear waste should be equal to the safe depths of their placement under the desert’s surfaces.
4. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claim 1 wherein said distribution of very small quantities of nuclear waste over vast desert areas of thousands of miles is in conformity with Nature’s purposeful way of distribution of radioactive elements in earth’s crust.
5. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claim 4 wherein said conformity with Nature’s purposeful way of distribution of radioactive elements in earth’s crust will create water underneath the desert’s surface and on the desert’s surface a few feet of decayed soil and water neces- sary for organic life, thus adding materially to the world food supply.
6. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claim 5 wherein said creation on the desert’s surface a few feet of decayed soil and water necessary for organic life will provide foresting of world's vast deserts with date palms and carpeting them with a verdure.
7. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claim 6 wherein said foresting of world's vast deserts with date palms and car- peting them with verdure will end dust storms forever.
8. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claim 6 wherein said foresting of world's vast deserts with date palms and car- peting them with a verdure will enable releasing of enormous amounts of oxy- gen into the earth’s atmosphere.
9. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claims 2, 3 and 8 wherein said enormous reduction of radioactive emission into the earth’s atmosphere and said releasing of enormous amounts of oxygen into the earth’s atmosphere will enormously contribute both to stopping of negative earth’s climate changes and to earth’s rebalancing.
10. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claims 5 wherein said material addition to the world food supply provide creation of millions new work places worldwide.
11. The natural management system for disposal of nuclear waste of claims 2, 5, 9 and 10 wherein said enormous reduction of radioactive emission into the earth’s atmosphere, said adding materially to the world food supply, said stopping of negative earth’s climate changes and earth’s rebalancing, and said creation of millions new work places worldwide will the challenge of nuclear waste turn into great GOOD for this civilization.
PCT/IB2020/000712 2020-09-21 2020-09-21 Natural nuclear waste management system WO2022058765A1 (en)

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Citations (9)

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US3986977A (en) 1975-02-03 1976-10-19 Nuclear Engineering Company, Inc. Methods of disposing of radioactive waste
US4178109A (en) 1977-10-11 1979-12-11 Krutenat Robert A Method for the disposal of nuclear or toxic waste materials
US4738564A (en) 1985-01-28 1988-04-19 Bottillo Thomas V Nuclear and toxic waste recycling process
DE4123034A1 (en) * 1991-07-12 1993-01-14 Max Dipl Ing Himmelheber DEPOSIT FOR FINAL STORAGE OF RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS
US5733066A (en) 1992-09-14 1998-03-31 Myers; Lawrence S. Apparatus and method for disposal of nuclear and other hazardous wastes
US5850614A (en) 1997-07-14 1998-12-15 Crichlow; Henry B. Method of disposing of nuclear waste in underground rock formations
US6238138B1 (en) 1997-07-14 2001-05-29 Henry Crichlow Method for temporary or permanent disposal of nuclear waste using multilateral and horizontal boreholes in deep islolated geologic basins
DE10241263A1 (en) * 2002-09-06 2004-05-19 Bögner, Friedrich, Dr.-Ing. Final storage of nuclear wastes involves reducing waste to granules, and adding durable casing
US6846967B2 (en) 2002-01-04 2005-01-25 Larry A. Altersitz Nuclear waste disposal system

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3986977A (en) 1975-02-03 1976-10-19 Nuclear Engineering Company, Inc. Methods of disposing of radioactive waste
US4178109A (en) 1977-10-11 1979-12-11 Krutenat Robert A Method for the disposal of nuclear or toxic waste materials
US4738564A (en) 1985-01-28 1988-04-19 Bottillo Thomas V Nuclear and toxic waste recycling process
DE4123034A1 (en) * 1991-07-12 1993-01-14 Max Dipl Ing Himmelheber DEPOSIT FOR FINAL STORAGE OF RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS
US5733066A (en) 1992-09-14 1998-03-31 Myers; Lawrence S. Apparatus and method for disposal of nuclear and other hazardous wastes
US5850614A (en) 1997-07-14 1998-12-15 Crichlow; Henry B. Method of disposing of nuclear waste in underground rock formations
US6238138B1 (en) 1997-07-14 2001-05-29 Henry Crichlow Method for temporary or permanent disposal of nuclear waste using multilateral and horizontal boreholes in deep islolated geologic basins
US6846967B2 (en) 2002-01-04 2005-01-25 Larry A. Altersitz Nuclear waste disposal system
DE10241263A1 (en) * 2002-09-06 2004-05-19 Bögner, Friedrich, Dr.-Ing. Final storage of nuclear wastes involves reducing waste to granules, and adding durable casing

Non-Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
ILIJA LAKICEVIC: "Aton'' True Cell, Atom and Particle Concept", INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENCE AND RESEARCH (IJSR, vol. 8, October 2019 (2019-10-01), pages 388 - 395, Retrieved from the Internet <URL:https://ijsr.net/archive/.v8i10/show_abstract.php?id=ART20201755>
WALTERLAO RUSSELL: "The Secret of Light", 1957, UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHY SWANNANOA, pages: 22980

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