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Business Insider recently traveled to Pripyat, a city in northern Ukraine that was evacuated and abandoned after the ...
Nearly four decades after the Chernobyl nuclear disaster, the site still demands attention. The danger may no longer come ...
The land beneath the former Aral Sea in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan is rising and will continue to do so for many decades. Now, scientists have an explanation that involves the sea drying up.
That restricted land, known as the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, now extends 1,000 square miles. It's illegal to live there (though a few families have defied the law by moving back), and off-limits ...
The world has been shaken by the recent decision to postpone the dismantling of the Chernobyl sarcophagus following a Russian attack on the nuclear power plant. This move, announced by the Ukrainian ...
Though Chernobyl is still home to a 1,000-square-mile restricted zone, the site's abandoned schoolyards, amusement park, and classrooms are now open to visitors 18 or older. "You will probably get ...
Clune Park was first described as Scotland's Chernobyl more than a decade ago, and the name has stuck. Local politicians say ...
Much of Clune Park in Port Glasgow has been deemed at risk of 'catastrophic collapse'.
What makes Chernobyl so unusual is that the site is ... that anyone visiting the area is safe from lingering radiation now, 33 years after the disaster. “Many people come here, they ask a ...
When you think of Chernobyl (or Chornobyl, now), you think of the nuclear accident, of course. But have you ever considered that where there is a nuclear reactor, there is a computer control system?
But those days are now over. For the first time ever, the stray pups living near the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant are being rescued and will soon be legally released for adoption. SPCAI is ...