Super fact 49 : The top one-meter (3.3 feet) of a typical 10 meters (33 feet) by 40 meters (131 feet) garden contains 2 kilograms (4.4 pounds) of Uranium. For comparison, the Hiroshima bomb contained 64 kilograms (121 pounds) of Uranium. Certain rocks such as Granite and Shale contain much more Uranium than soil. Uranium also exists in the atmosphere and there is 4.5 billion tons of Uranium in the ocean.
The numbers above come from the IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) and Stanford University . I should mention that the numbers vary depending on Geography, type of soil, etc. For example, there is much less Uranium in the soil in Florida compared to the soil in the Midwest.
This may come as a surprise to many people. Isn’t Uranium radioactive? How come we are still alive? That’s why I call this a super fact. The answer is that even though Uranium is used in nuclear bombs and nuclear reactors, it is by itself not very radioactive. You can hold natural uranium in your hand without much risk. The radioactivity from, for example, nuclear explosions come mainly from the fission process and the radioactivity from nuclear reactor waste is mainly from other isotopes created by the fission process in the reactor rather than the uranium itself.

What Are Isotopes?
Before I explain some facts about the radioactivity and decay rate of Uranium, I should explain what an isotope is. Atoms consist of a nucleus and electrons surrounding the nucleus. In the nucleus there are protons and neutrons (and some other stuff). Neutral atoms have an equal amount of electrons and protons, which determines what kind of element it is. Hydrogen has one electron and one proton. Helium has two electrons and two protons. Oxygen has eight electrons and eight protons, etc. The number of protons/electrons is called the atomic number of the element.
The number of protons plus the number of neutrons is called the mass number. Atoms of the same element but different number of neutrons are called isotopes. Uranium-235 or U-235 has 92 protons and 235 – 92 = 143 neutrons. The number if protons/electrons determine the chemical properties of the element. The number of neutrons determines nuclear properties such as the stability of the nucleus, radioactivity, etc., as well as the weight. Therefore U-238 and U-235 are identical chemically and look and feel the same, but U-235 is more radioactive, and you can use U-235 for fission but not U-238.

The decay rate of Uranium
There are three main Uranium isotopes. Uranium-234, Uranium-235, and Uranium-238. Uranium-238 is the most common. 99.28% of natural Uranium is Uranium-238, 0.72% is Uranium-235 and 0.0057% is Uranium-234. Uranium-235 is the isotope we use for nuclear weapons.
The different isotopes have different decay rates and different levels of radioactivity. The half life of a radioactive isotope is the time it takes for an isotope to decay so that only half of it is left. The half-life of Uranium-238 is four and half billion years. That means that it will be around for a very long time, but since its decay rate is so slow, it is not very radioactive. The half-life of Uranium-235 is 710 million years, again it will be around for a very long time, but again, since its decay rate is so slow, it is not very radioactive. The half-life Uranium-234 is 247,000 years, a little bit faster but it still has a pretty slow decay rate.
This should be compared to Cesium-137, which has a half-life of roughly 30 years. In other words, it decays 150 million times faster than Uranium-238 and 23.7 million times faster than Uranium-235. Since Cesium-137 decays so much faster than the Uranium isotopes it means that each atom of Cesium-137 will send out radioactive particles much more often than a Uranium atom will, making it much more radioactive.
If you want to read about when I was walking around a whole day with a Cesium-137 sample in the back pocket of my jeans, click here. Radon-222, an extremely radioactive isotope of radon, which seeps into our basements from the inside of earth. It has a half-life of 3.82 days giving it a decay rate that is 430 billion times faster than Uranium-238 and 68 billion times faster than Uranium-235.
What makes it possible to make a nuclear bomb from Uranium-235 is not because it is very radioactive. It is not. It is because it has properties that make it perfect for bomb making. Each nucleus emits more than one neutron, in fact more than two on average, and the neutrons colliding with other Uranium-235 nucleuses can be made to travel at the correct speed to cause fission. In other words, it is fissile. It is a goldilocks situation. It is just right. Below is an illustration showing a chain reaction. Observe, the picture indicates that Uranium has 95 protons. This is wrong. Uranium has 92 protons. When I have the time, I will fix this picture.

Other Nuclear Related Posts
- Radon Represents our Largest Exposure to Ionizing Radiation.
- Ukraine Gave up Thousands of Nuclear Warheads.
- We Exploded Thousands of Nuclear Bombs.
- Review of Atomic Awakening.
Wow how interesting..Thank you for taking the time to explain this in laymans language, Thomas 🙂
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Thank you so much for your kind comment Carol.
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This was absolutely mind-blowing and brilliantly explained! 💥 It’s so fascinating to realize how much uranium exists naturally around us and yet poses such little threat in its raw state. The comparison between the half-lives of Uranium and more dangerous isotopes like Cesium-137 and Radon-222 really puts things into perspective.
I especially appreciated the clear explanation about isotopes and the emphasis on how it’s not uranium’s radioactivity, but its fissile nature that makes it so critical (and dangerous) in nuclear reactions. That “goldilocks” analogy was such a simple yet powerful way to describe U-235’s unique properties.
Thank you for making nuclear science accessible and genuinely interesting! If you enjoy curious facts, tiny doses of mom life, and slices of everyday wonder, feel free to visit my twin mom blog Twin Chaos & Toddler Giggles at twinmom73.wordpress.com or connect with me on Instagram @twintales2025. Let’s keep learning and sharing stories together! 🌍✨
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Wow thank you so much Diya for your very kind and supportive words. I certainly enjoy curious facts and mom’s life and I believe I succeeded in subscribing to your blog.
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Interesting facts to know about. The numbers and math parts are way over my head in understanding, but that Uranium being in the soil got my attention. Back when I was a kid, my parents had a cardboard box (kind of small) up in the closet. It was labeled Uranium dirt. I never knew what it was or what it was for, heh heh I never asked, because I was snooping. Later on I think I was reading about Uranium dirt and it was used to ease pain of arthritis by sticking your hands into the dirt/sand. I googled this and it’s true that back in the 50s it was a popular and regular thing to do. 🙂
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Yes Uranium isn’t very common but a lot more common than people think and we have it all around us. I was thinking up about using the title “You have eaten Uranium” since most of us have eaten dirt at some point, but I thought that was too click-baitish. I remember a guide at a natural history museum passing out uranium ore to the kids. It is radioactive and not healthy to be around for too long, or eat, but its radioactivity is highly overestimated. It is not that bad. Back in the 1950’s they had a very poor understanding of what radiation could do.
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Not sure if I’m fascinated or terrified. Sigh.
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There is a lot of Uranium all around us but the good news is that it is only mildly radioactive. The special feature with Uranium or one isotope of Uranium (235) is that it is fissile, which I guess is scary depending on who succeeds in creating fission.
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1S2. 2S2, 2P6… drilled into my head, never to leave 😂 Great post, very interesting! 😎👏
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Ha ha you know your atom/electron shells. Thank you so much Darryl
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I did not know that! I feel so much smarter today, Thomas, ready to impress my friends and family. Lol. I love your superfacts. I learn something every time. 🙂 Thanks!
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Thank you so much for your very kind words Diane
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Hi Thomas, I honestly had not thought about this at all. Very interesting post. Thanks for sharing 💛
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Thank you so much Robbie
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My pleasure
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I remember reading about this topic many years ago but had forgotten most of it; thanks for the refresher. An extremely informative and interesting piece, Thomas.
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Thank you so much for your kind words Lynette
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Oona: “Hmm, so Oona could perhaps open her own uranium mine? Interesting …”
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Ha ha, yes once we figured out how to make extracting Uranium from dirt viable, then Oona can start mining Uranium in the backyard, and make you all rich.
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This definitely sounds like something Dennis would have tried on the blog back in the day …
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That is great! Good for Dennis 🐕🦺🏆
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😀
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Nice post
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Thank you Satyam
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Welcome dear freind Thomas have a good day🎸
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Thank you and have a good day you too
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🎸🎸
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This was eye opening to me Thomas, especially that 2 kg of uranium are in people’s backyards! 🙂
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Uranium is not as common as Calcium, silicates, water and iron, but it is much more common than people think Uranium is not a rare metal. That surprises people.
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Fascinating! 🙂
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Thank you Debby
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🙂
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And it is also not very radioactive, which makes it safe to have some in your backyard.
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Unlike Iran, who is busy enriching theirs. 🙂
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Yes you are right and we know it is not for nuclear power stations. For CANDU reactors you can use the completely un-enriched 0.7% of U-235, for BWR and PWR reactors you need 2%, and for a bomb you need at least 82%, typically 90%, and Iran has enriched to at least 60%. That is not for nuclear reactors. That’s for bombs. A very scary situation.
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Thanks for that Thomas. And yes, Iran is very scary.
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I once took care of a young Navajo man who was exposed to uranium and exhibited all of the symptoms of radiation poisoning. It was horrible.
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My guess is he must have been around concentrated uranium / uranium ore for a long time.
I can add that even though the radiation is low (I held uranium ore in my hands for a while with no effect) uranium is also poisonous so if you ingest it or breath uranium dust you can be poisoned.
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Very interesting and thorough. Thanks for the share. I would most likely never have learned this anywhere else.
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Thank you so much Topic Hunter. I collect facts that are important and I verify are true, yet surprising or commonly disputed (by non-experts). I call them super facts.
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It looks great, subscribed 🤝
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Thank you so Topic Hunter. I tried to subscribe to your blog or blog hub, but I can’t find the subscribe button.
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A timely and informative post! While I had read about the fissile nature of U-235, it was an eye opener for me when you compared it with Cs-137 and Rn-222. A great post indeed, Thomas 👏👏💐
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Thank you so much Kaushal
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