Scientists discovered something impossible in Chernobyl's radioactive ruins - life is thriving where nothing should survive.
Dogs living near the Chernobyl nuclear plant aren’t radioactive mutants—but their genetic differences reveal a surprising story.
The purpose of this report is to update findings of the International Nuclear Safety Advisory Group’s Summary Report on the Post-Accident Review Meeting on the Chernobyl Accident (INSAG-1), published ...
Radiation likely hasn’t caused the genetic differences seen between two dog populations near the Chernobyl Nuclear Power ...
Feral dogs living near Chernobyl differ genetically from their ancestors who survived the 1986 nuclear plant disaster—but ...
This report was prepared after the Post-Accident Review Meeting on the Chernobyl Accident, Vienna, 25–29 August 1986. A team of Soviet experts who presented a report on the accident at the Chernobyl ...
On April 26, 1986, the worst nuclear disaster since World War II decimated Chernobyl in the Soviet Union. Nearly 40 years ...
Radiation-induced mutation is unlikely to have induced genetic differences between dog populations in Chernobyl City and the ...
On April 26, 1986, the worst nuclear disaster since World War II decimated Chernobyl in the Soviet Union. Nearly 40 years later, a lot has changed. Chernobyl, for one, is now within the borders of ...
Chernobyl vodka made in exclusion zone Chernobyl ... who is based at Portsmouth University, explained that it was "no more radioactive than any other vodka". The team grew crops in the exclusion ...