News

A team of researchers in France are building on fundamental experimental research undertaken in the Ukrainian Chornobyl ...
Frogs Of Chernobyl Adapted To Survive High Radiation. Now, They Don’t Need To Radiation in the exclusion zone is no longer enough to cause chronic damage to wildlife.
Pollution is a worldwide problem which does not respect national boundaries and is likely to intensify as the spread of industrial development continues. BBC News looks at some of the places around ...
Several animals live in the the 'Chernobyl Exclusion Zone' - a 30-mile cordon where public access is forbidden due to contamination.
Research established that gray wolves in Chernobyl have altered immune systems, similar to cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment.
Research established that gray wolves in Chernobyl have altered immune systems, similar to cancer patients undergoing radiation treatment.
Where to find the current radiation background To track the radiation background in Ukraine, a special online map was launched by the developers of the SaveEcoBot service. It started working last year ...
Map shows potential Europe fallout zone if Putin blows up nuclear power plant Radioactive material was detected as far away as Wales when just one Chernobyl reactor blew - Zaporizhzhia in Russian ...
Dogs living in the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant industrial area are genetically distinct from other dogs, but scientists don’t yet know if radiation is the reason.
The world's worst radiation hotspot At the start of the Cold War, Stalin chose one of the furthest outposts of his empire to test the Soviet Union's first nuclear bombs. Sixty years on, their ...
Evolution. In April 1986, Chernobyl was the scene of a major nuclear reactor disaster that released the largest amount of nuclear radiation into the environment in history.