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The capsule you are looking for is smaller than a coin
Photo: - / dpa
Not a needle in a haystack, but a feverish search is currently underway in Western Australia for a radioactive capsule measuring six by eight millimeters over a distance of 1400 kilometres.
Authorities said the capsule was lost while being transported from a mining site and must be somewhere between a mine north of the mining town of Newman and Malaga, a suburb of metropolitan Perth.
The region's health officer, Andrew Robertson, issued an urgent health warning.
Anyone who discovers something that looks like a tiny capsule should keep a distance of at least five meters.
The capsule emits "a fair amount of radiation," Robertson pointed out.
Within a radius of one meter, this is about as high as ten X-rays within one hour - or the amount of natural radiation that a person is exposed to over a whole year.
“It emits both beta and gamma rays.
If you get close to her, you can suffer skin damage, including skin burns," Robertson said.
He published a photo on Twitter showing that such a radioactive capsule is significantly smaller than a ten cent coin.
Meanwhile, it's not even clear when exactly the tiny one went missing - it's said to have fallen off a truck sometime after January 10th.
According to the information, vibrations caused a bolt to have loosened while driving, and the capsule then fell through the bolt hole.
It was initially unclear why the capsule was not secured better.
The fire brigade, the Western Australia police, the Ministry of Health and experts participated in the search.
Vehicle owners traveling on the Great Northern Highway were asked to check their tires, according to broadcaster ABC.
The capsule may have got stuck there.
Radioactive capsules are used in mining.
In the Newman region, where transport began, iron ore is mainly mined.
svs/dpa