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Chernobyl wildlife rebounds as animals reclaim the radioactive zone
A wolf trots through a stand of Scots pine less than 10 miles from the entombed Chernobyl reactor, its image frozen by a ...
Forty years after the Chernobyl disaster, the exclusion zone has transformed into an unexpected wildlife haven. With humans ...
The Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (CEZ) has quickly become a 1,000 square-mile science experiment, as experts use the highly irradiated zone as a chance to understand animal biology placed under those ...
Four decades after the 1986 nuclear disaster, Chernobyl’s exclusion zone has transformed into an accidental wildlife refuge, with species from wolves to rare Przewalski’s horses flourishing in the ...
Fieldwork in the Chernobyl exclusion zone in Ukraine, May 2019. Germán Orizaola (Universidad de Oviedo), CC BY April 26 marks ...
Wolves now prowl the vast no-man’s-land spanning Ukraine and Belarus, and brown bears have returned after more than a century ...
Despite radiation levels that remain too dangerous for human habitation, populations of wolves, lynx, moose, and red deer ...
The huge area around Chernobyl has become an enormous wildlife reserve! And many creatures are thriving ...
The Chernobyl exclusion zone, once a human evacuation area due to the 1986 nuclear disaster, now hosts a thriving ecosystem ...
They present a compelling story of radiation, mutation and survival against the odds. But the underlying science didn’t ...
By DEREK GATOPOULOS and EVGENIY MALOLETKA CHERNOBYL, Ukraine (AP) — On contaminated land that is too dangerous for human life ...
On April 26, 1986, disaster struck the small Ukrainian-Belarusian border town of Chernobyl, (then part of the Soviet Union) when a series of steam explosions led to a nuclear meltdown. The apocalyptic ...
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