tomBitonti
Hero
If we're assuming eventual hostilities, and assuming that radiation has a similar effect on their environment as it does on ours, how feasible would it be to transport largeish amounts of radioactive materials (radioactive waste as the primary source, moving on from there if needed) near their planet, if the goal were simply to seed the atmosphere with radioactive materials? How much radioactive materials would we need to seed an earth type planet with enough radiation to begin killing off or sterilizing the larger lifeforms?
The question is, how much is largish?
Some interesting, and horrifying, information out there about toxicity.
This is a very chilling paper title "Human Plutonium Injection Experiments".
http://www.fas.org/sgp/othergov/doe/lanl/pubs/00326640.pdf
While finding that, I found information about the difference between Radium and Plutonium, and that Botulin Toxin, is the most toxic substance. (I hesitate over pronouncing that a fact, since I haven't followed that subject far enough to find a dependable source.)
I would presume that the toxicity of Bolulin is dependent on the biology of the organism receiving a dose, meaning Botulin would likely not work on the aliens. At the same time, there would probably something else that did.
Then again, finding something that was self-replicating (a virus or bacterium) probably makes the amount less of an issue than finding the right vector for reproduction and transmission.
Thx!
TomB