Chernobyl is an area that has been deemed unsuitable for living. Nearly four decades after an explosion expelled 400 times ...
In the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, worms show no genetic damage despite living in highly radioactive soil, and free-ranging ...
In 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant in Ukraine exploded. Researchers are now discovering surprising things about the ...
After the accident traces ... the reactor following the disaster. Wildlife has thrived in the absence of hunting, farming, and urban development, turning Chernobyl into an accidental refuge ...
Microscopic worms that live their lives in the highly radioactive environment of the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone (CEZ ... Most ...
They are thought to have survived attempts by Soviet soldiers to shoot the animals to prevent the spread of radiation ... in their genomes that differed between the two groups with some pointing to ...
Rival packs of stray dogs scavenging for scraps around the Chernobyl fallout zone may be evolving faster than other animals to survive in one of the most hostile environments on Earth.Scientists ...
They are thought to have survived attempts by Soviet soldiers to shoot the animals to prevent ... some pointing to genetic repair after exposures similar to Chernobyl. Scientists maintain there ...
A landmark study of the 500 dogs living around Chernobyl, Ukraine ... environment and what that might mean for any population – animal or human – that experiences similar exposures.” ...
The 1,000 square mile Chernobyl Exclusion Zone has become something of a wildlife sanctuary due to the absence of humans. A volunteer of Clean Futures Fund calms a stray dog after it was operated ...
But while the contamination devastated some wildlife populations ... with with genetic repair after exposures similar to those experienced by the dogs in Chernobyl. The research paper reads ...