Chernobyl is often described as a ghost zone, but nature never really left. Wolves, frogs, birds, insects, dogs, and forests ...
Expert warns that a nuclear catastrophe in Iran's Bushehr could harm Gulf countries through radiation in water, affecting ...
As strikes continue on Iran’s nuclear facilities, the real danger isn’t the explosion, but what happens if critical safety ...
In April of 1986, what was intended to be a routine safety test at a nuclear power plant in the Soviet Union turned into one ...
On the 40th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, POWER sent a freelance photographer and correspondent to the site in ...
Meteor impacts may have helped spark life on Earth, creating hot, chemical-rich environments where the first living cells ...
Italy abandoned nuclear power after Chernobyl and Fukushima. Now, rising energy demand and geopolitics are forcing a rethink.
The Chernobyl explosion and resulting fire spewed 200 times as much radioactivity into the environment as the Hiroshima and ...
Nearly 40 years after the disaster, Cladosporium sphaerospermum not only survives lethal radiation levels but appears to grow ...
While viewers can watch the aftermath of the Chernobyl explosion in the stellar HBO limited series Chernobyl, which released ...
Morning Overview on MSN
Chernobyl fungi may have evolved to harness radiation for growth
Inside the shattered remains of Chernobyl’s Unit 4 reactor, where radiation levels can still kill a human in minutes, ...
Scientists warn that annual radiation exposure increases the risk of heart attack and stroke among long-term nuclear workers.
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