Anonymous ID: 707825 Dec. 1, 2018, 7:35 p.m. No.4109290   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9297 >>9334 >>9363 >>9403 >>9546 >>9558 >>9565 >>9743 >>9759 >>9828

>>4109126

OK now I figured out your bottom line.

People are not grasping your subject matter because it hasn't been abstracted well.

 

Concrete processing facilities are suspicious because they might be surreptitously be isolating Uranium from coal fly ash.

 

  • Fly ash can be used in making concrete.

  • Concrete can stabilize a large quantity of fly ash – which is a fairly toxic material that the coal power industry has a hard time getting rid of.

  • So bulk quantities of fly ash are shipped to concrete-making plants.

  • The plants could conceal hidden facilities that extract uranium from fly ash … and then go on to mix the fly ash residue into concrete.

 

This theory has merit and should be considered.

ThankQ, anon.

 

BAKER NOTABLE

Anonymous ID: 707825 Dec. 1, 2018, 7:44 p.m. No.4109398   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9522 >>9617

>>4109363

I happened to see a couple of patent applications that were filed in the 1970s for the use of fly ash in concrete. I forget the details though. It was to get rid of fly ash that had been removed from flue gases by a scrubber. The scrubber used a lot of ground lime and water spray(?) so the resulting slurry had a whole lot of sulfate junk in it that was an environmental problem and was created in great quantities by coal fired power plants.

Anyhow…