$25.00 each plate, plus shipping
"RADIOACTIVE RED"
ORANGE FIESTAWARE PLATES
by HOMER LAUGHLIN CERAMICS CO.
CERAMICS
GLAZED WITH 14% URANIUM
Made in USA at West Virginia
Original Uranium Plates, 1936-1943
Prior to WWII, glazing the color of ceramic dishes was
the main application for uranium.The glglaaze has
excellent durability; these vintage plates are more than
80 years old, yet they are in remarkable good condition.
Their weights vary slightly from plate to plate
because they were handmade. The orange glaze
gets its color from 14% natural uranium oxide in
the glaze. Using Bicron or Ludlum instruments,
the activity level measured in the plates is at a
middle / moderate level, comparable to that in
natural unprocessed rocks. Fiesta Ware plates
made after 1943 were still named Fiesta Red,
but the newer vintage plates, made after 1943,
lacked the uranium oxide colorant in their glaze.
RECOMMENDED RADIATION DETECTOR:
PANCAKE GEIGER COUNTER
I do NOT recommend a scintillation detector.
That type is so sensitive, that it responds all
the time to cosmic rays originating from outer
space. The moderate sensitivity of a pancake
geiger counter responds slightly to natural
background radiation, and stronger to moderate
stimuli such as Fiesta Ware uranium-glazed plates.
RADIATION HORMESIS
Enclosed with the Fiesta Ware plate will be a
reprint of a Wickipedia article on the topic of
radiation hormesis. This principle states that,
external exposure to low-level ionizing radiation
near the threshold is beneficial to health because
it activates defense-mechanisms in the body that
resist against toxic effects. Hormesis is controversial,
but this principle has been approved by the U.S.
federal Environmental Protection Agency, by
the French Academy of Sciences, and by health-
support agencies in China and Japan. The 2017
EPA pronouncement likened mild radiation
exposure to mild exposure to summer sunlight.
SHIPPING
Flat-rate shipping: 1-6 plates
As many as six of these plates can
ship combined in a medium-sized flat-rate
priority mail box. Thus, the postage expense
is the same for one to six plates. The plates
will be wrapped with cardboard and cushioning
materials to ensure that they arrive in perfect
unbroken condition. Printed materials and
photos describing the early history of Fiesta
plates and of the New Mexico uranium
mining industry, will be enclosed. Breakage in
transit is insured to $50.00 by USPS insurance
on Priority mailed packages.
SHIPPING COST: ONLY
THE ACTUAL POSTAGE!
Some sellers conceal the actual
postage cost; I print the postage cost at
the top of the shipping label. If the actual
postage cost is $0.20 or more below what you
paid, I will refund the amount overpaid to your
account, as soon as the package is mailed.
$25.00 each plate, plus shipping
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"RADIOACTIVE RED" FIESTAWARE PLATES
Made with Natural Uranium Glaze, 1936-1943
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General
The radiation level of the red/orange plates, measured by a geiger "pancake probe," averages about 25,000. cpm. This is in the middle level of radiation shown by uranium rocks found in the field. The radiation level of white/ivory Fiesta plates, based on 2% uranium in the glaze, is only about 1,000 cpm, using a pancake probe. The white/ivory plates are barely measurable at all with a "yellow toy geiger, CDV-700.
The following is a Googled report on these famous vintage plates; the report lacks the photos. Sorry about the missing photos, but my photos can substitute. The
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The Fiesta dinnerware line was introduced in 1936 with a choice of five colors: red, blue, green, yellow and ivory. Red was the first color that the company selected when designing the product, and blue was the second (these were the colors of the Fiesta ware that Andy Warhol collected). Since the idea was to mix and match the dinnerware, the five colors had to be compatible.
Fiesta red has always been the most popular color even though it was the most expensive. The higher price was due to the cost of the raw materials and the fact that the production of the red required a greater level of control during the firing process.
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The red color was achieved by adding uranium oxide in the glaze - measurements have indicated that by weight, up to 14 % of the glaze might be uranium. How much glaze was employed per plate is unclear but it has been estimated that a single plate contains 4.5 grams of uranium (Buckley et al). Piesch et al estimated the glaze thickness at 0.2 mm.
Since this uranium could be used in the production of an atomic bomb, Fiesta red became a victim of World War II when the US government confiscated the company’s stocks of uranium. Fiesta red disappeared until 1959 when production resumed, this time using depleted uranium (DU) rather than the original natural uranium. The Fiesta red plate in the above photo was made from depleted uranium while the ivory plate was made from natural uranium.
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In 1969 the entire Fiesta ware line was discontinued, and in its place the company produced what was known as Fiesta Ironstone. The latter, which was only manufactured in Fiesta red (aka Mango Red), didn’t last long. It was discontinued in 1973. This was the end of Fiesta red. Years later, in 1986, a new line of Fiesta ware was introduced but without the red color.
1936 – 1943 Fiesta red was produced using natural uranium
1959 – 1969 Fiesta red Fiesta Ware was produced using depleted uranium
1969 - 1973 Fiesta red Fiesta Ironstone was produced using depleted uranium
It is worth noting that the use of uranium to produce a red ceramic glaze was not limited to Fiesta ware. Almost any antique ceramic with a deep orange/red color is likely to be radioactive, e.g., that produced by the Bauer Pottery Company. In addition, various manufacturers, including the Homer Laughlin Company, have used uranium to give their ceramics other colors, e.g., yellow, green, brown. Buckley et al estimated that 2 million pieces of dinnerware between 1959 and 1969 that employed uranium containing glaze.
Estimates of Radiation Exposures
A very detailed analysis of the radiation exposures due to uranium in dinnerware can be found in the Nuclear Regulatory Commission publication “Systematic Radiological Assessment of Exemptions for Source and Byproduct Materials” (NUREG 1717).
There are three principal radiation exposure pathways associated with Fiesta Ware and other uranium containing tableware:
1. Exposure to the body from the gamma rays emitted by radionuclides in the ceramic glaze
Buckley et al reported exposure rates of 0.5 and 15 mR/hr at the surface of a dinner plate and 0.002 and 0.3 mR/hr at one meter.
The following effective dose equivalent rates were reported in NUREG-1717 for the gamma rays emitted by uranium-containing dinnerware (20 % by weight uranium):
Distance 10” Plate 3.5” Cup
1 foot 6.5 x 10-4 mrem/hr 3.7 x 10-4 mrem/hr
3 feet 7.7 x 10-5 mrem/hr 4.1 x 10-5 mrem/hr
6 feet 1.9 x 10-5 mrem/hr 1.1 x 10-5 mrem/hr
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$25.00 each plate, plus shipping
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Stephen Buggie, Ph.D.
Professor Emeritus of Psychology
Univ. of New Mexico, Gallup