DEPLETED URANIUM TESTING....
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Latest News
12/26/2005
Operation Iraqi Freedom, UMRC's Veteran's DU Screening
UMRC is conducting a uranium bioassay and clincal
studies program for veterans of US Operation Iraqi
Freedom, UK Operation TELIC, and AU Operation Falconer;
as well as, civilian residents and NGO staff. Click here
for more information.
12/26/2005
Uranium Biological Effects Study – Port Hope
UMRC is pleased on its official participation in the
Port Hope Biological Studies Project, Port Hope Ontario.
Port Hope is the home of two nuclear industry
facilities: Zircatec Precision Industries and Cameco
Nuclear Fuels Division. Cameco acquired the Port Hope
uranium refinery, conversion and metals processing
facility from the original Canadian Crown Corporation,
Eldarado Nuclear. Eldarado Nuclear participated in the
Manhattan Project and now as Cameco, supplies UF6 to the
US uranium enrichment program and UO2 to Zircatec and
other fuel rod manufacturers.
Currently Zircatec and Cameco process commercial natural
uranium, depleted uranium, and enriched uranium stocks.
As Eldoradeo, the refinery supplied Canadian and US
Defense Departments with uranium and depleted uranium
metals and extruded rods for kinetic energy penetrator
research. Retired employees confirm that DU-KEP extruded
rods were manufactured in Port Hope in the 1960’s
onwards. The Cameco facility hosts one of the largest
uranium metal processing capacities in the industry.
Dr. Asaf Durakovic, UMRC’s Director of Research has been
appointed to the Medical Advisory Committee, Port Hope
Community Health Concerns Committee. Tedd Weyman, UMRC’s
Deputy Director is leading the field investigations at
Port Hope.
Click here for the program application.
10/24/2005
Honoring Dr. Leonard Dietz
Leonard A. Dietz, age 82, of Niskayuna, died October 24,
2005. Dr. Dietz was born in Manistee, Mich. and grew up
there. In February 1943, he joined the U.S. Army Air
Corps and after graduating from flying training, served
as a pilot in the 506th Fighter Group, 462nd Fighter
Squadron and was based on Iwo Jima. He flew the P51D
Mustang fighter on very long range missions during the
closing months of World War II. He was awarded three Air
Medals and a Distinguished Unit Citation, and was
discharged from the Air Corps in August 1946 as a 1st
Lt. After the war, he graduated from the University of
Michigan in 1949 with a BS in physics, and received an
MS in physics in 1950. He then joined GE and worked in
the general engineering laboratory in Schenectady until
1955, when he transferred to Knolls Atomic Power
Laboratory where he worked for 28 years. He was an
experimental research physicist in mass spectrometry and
was responsible for developing advanced mass
spectrometer instrumentation and new analytical
techniques for isotope ratio analysis of uranium and
plutonium. His extensive published research in ion
detection resulted in ion pulse-counting detectors for
mass spectrometry. He was manager of a technical group
that included the mass spectrometer component. Dr. Dietz
was active in a local Boy Scout troop while his sons
were growing up and was a volunteer fireman for 14
years. He was treasurer of Jones Boarding Home, a local
non-profit corporation that took care of mentally
disadvantaged adults, and was active in the First
Unitarian Society of Schenectady and the Unitarian
Universalist Society of Albany, and was president of the
Albany Memorial Society. After the 1991 Persian Gulf
War, he provided physics support on airborne uranium
particles from depleted uranium munitions to TV, radio
and print journalists, to Congress, and to
environmentalists and researchers who were investigating
the spread and health risks of these radioactive
particles. A generous and loving husband and father, Dr.
Dietz is survived by his wife of 55 years, Betty; his
children, Thomas, Kristin and Allen; two grandchildren,
Max and Iris.
For more information on Dr. Dietz's contribution to
understanding the effects of depleted uranium click
here.
10/5/2005
UMRC Presents at the IV International Media Forum on the
Protection of Nature
Invited by the President of Italy and the Vatican, Dr.
Durakovic gave a talk titled "Radioactive Waste: the
Viability of the Biosphere" at the IV International
Media Forum on the Protection of Nature, Villa
Mondragone, Monte Porzio, Rome.
11/19/2004
Baghdad and Al Basra Results to be Presented to the RSNA
in Chicago
The UMRC is presenting results from uranium analysis of
civilians of Baghdad and Al Basra following Operation
Iraqi Freedom to the Radiological Society of North
America. The abstract is available on the RSNA website.
More News
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Contact UMRC
Please make all inquiries by to UMRC through email.
You can send an email to UMRC through our online form.
Mail
Canada & International
Uranium Medical Research Centre
157 Carleton Street, Suite 206
Toronto, Onatrio, Canada M5A 2K3
United States
Uranium Medical Research Centre
3430 Connecticut Avenue - 11854
Washington, DC, USA 20008
Phone
(001) 416-465-1341
Email
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About UMRC
The Uranium Medical Research Centre (UMRC) is an
independent non-profit organization founded in 1997 to
provide objective and expert scientific and medical
research into the effects of uranium, transuranium
elements, and radionuclides produced by the process of
uranium decay and fission. UMRC is also a registered
charity in the United States and Canada.
Vision
UMRC's vision for the world is a full awareness of the
risks of using nuclear products and by-products AND to
contain the still reversible alterations of the earth's
biosphere since the advent of nuclear events and the
resulting contamination.
There needs to be an appreciation of the enormous
effects and damage of uranium on the environment and
human health. Governments, scientific communities, and
the general public need to understand the many forms of
contamination and specific effects. Continued abuses of
uranium and radioisotopes will only lead to the steady
degradation and eventual end of meaningful life on
earth.
Mission
UMRC's mission is to contribute to the vision by
providing independent, objective, and expert scientific
and medical research on the effects of uranium and
transuranic elements.
Research into the effects of uranium products and
by-products cannot be subject to considerations of
economic, political, or military expediency. The true,
unfiltered facts about its effects must be available to
all persons and communities in order to further the goal
of full awareness and containment.
Core Activities
UMRC's core activities include: research, medical
assessment, clinical treatment, and dissemination to
scientific and medical communities
http://www.umrc.net/about_umrc.aspx