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Four decades after Chernobyl, something weird is happening inside the Exclusion Zone: the dogs that roam the radioactive area ...
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Interesting Engineering on MSNHow much radiation is too much? Less than you thinkFrom cosmic rays to CT scans, radiation surrounds us but not all exposure is dangerous. Here’s how to separate fact from fear ...
"Of course, Chernobyl was significantly contaminated with very high levels of radiation, but it's also a really complex, massive area. And so understanding what the situation was on the ground ...
Wolves wonder freely inside the exclusion zone around the Chernobyl nuclear reactor. REUTERS. They learned that the wolves are exposed to 11.28 millirem of radiation daily for their lifespans ...
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The Daily Galaxy on MSNA Black Fungus Is Thriving In Chernobyl By Feeding On Radiation—could It Help Humanity?In the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, a place where radiation levels remain dangerously high decades after the 1986 nuclear disaster, scientists have discovered an organism defying the odds. A black fungus ...
Frogs living in Chernobyl have been subjected to radioactive materials that still persist around the area. You would think the exposure would have negative effects on them, but the radiation ...
A recent study reveals that current radiation levels in Chernobyl’s Exclusion Zone are not significantly impacting the age, stress levels, or aging rate of local wildlife, particularly the ...
Activist, volunteer, chief sergeant Stanislav Humeniuk — a photographer for the Chernobyl Radiation and Ecological Biosphere ...
In April 1986, Chernobyl was the scene of a major nuclear reactor disaster that released the largest amount of nuclear radiation into the environment in history.
On April 26, 1896, the industrial city of Pripyat in northern Ukraine was changed forever. Located just 16.5 km from the city ...
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