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Radiation warning gains skull and crossbones

You would not call it a subtle sign, especially combined with a picture of a man running away
Run, while you still can!
Run, while you still can!
(Image: IAEA/ISO)

You couldn鈥檛 call it subtle. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is adding a skull and crossbones and the figure of a person running away to its warning symbol for dangerous ionising radiation.

鈥淭oo many people get injured each year when they find a large source of radiation, don鈥檛 understand the symbol and take off the lead shielding,鈥 says Carolyn MacKenzie of the IAEA. In recent incidents, people have died trying to salvage cobalt sources from dumped medical equipment.

When the IAEA tested the original radiating 鈥渢refoil鈥 symbol at an international school, it found that many children mistook the trefoil for a non-threatening propeller. So on 15 February it launched the new design, adding alarming images to the trefoil.

The IAEA tested it in 11 countries. 鈥淚t means stop, run away,鈥 says MacKenzie. 鈥淢ost people got the message.鈥

Topics: Nuclear technology