This scenario is much like when the Local Color brings you a dead radioactive seagull, except this time your surprisingly competent coworkers may have captured an actual live, radioactive, and displeased animal to bring to you. It's just another day in paradise.https://twitter.com/funranium/status/1309713905141215232 …
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When you're working in a sampling lab, you get used to receiving some odd things but for all of them it means reducing that odd thing to a useful form for your analytical techniques. If presented a shitting, pissing, terrified, & angry feral cat YOU DON'T REDUCE THE CAT ITSELF.
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Luckily, the cat is presenting you with plentiful samples for in vitro bioassay. Just see if you can collect it without contaminating it with you own blood. That's just bad technique. If you wanted to do in vivo counting, that's another matter.
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Much like dealing with an uncooperative cat for anything else, it's CAT BURRITO TIME to stick them in the whole body counter, though for small animal veterinary applications this is more "sit still you sonofabitch while I set the NaI probe next to you GODDAMMIT DON'T PEE AGAIN!"
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PROTIP: Most non-medical/veterinary radiation detection equipment don't react well to urine. This applies to all four animals in the poll, but some can be more displeased at you than others. And the questions of "Which derelict building?" & "Suspect why?" become more important.
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Le chargement semble prendre du temps.
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