#chernobyl

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@ItalianNews@mastodon.ozioso.online · 2d ago
Today: La società che riapre le miniere d'uranio italiane: valgono un miliardo (e sono pronte all'uso) Quarant'anni dopo il disastro di Chernobyl in Italia potrebbero riaprire le miniere di uranio di Novazza, in Lombardia. Il sito, in Alta Valle Seriana, considerato tra i più importanti giacimenti storici di uranio in Italia, è fermo dal 1987, dopo il referendum sul nucleare seguito all'incidente... The company reopening Italian uranium mines: worth a billion (and ready for use) Forty years after the Chernobyl disaster, uranium mines in Novazza, in Lombardy, Italy, could reopen. The site, in the Upper Seriana Valley, considered one of Italy’s most important historical uranium deposits, has been inactive since 1987, following the referendum on nuclear power after the accident… #Italian #Chernobyl #Novazza #Lombardy #Italy https://www.today.it/dossier/economia/miniere-uranio-bergamo-sondrio.html
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@nofollownoindex@mastodon.trueten.de · 5d ago
Ich saß als 7-jähriger vor der Glotze und traute meinen Augen nicht. Meine Eltern waren klar gegen Atomkraft und ich hatte durchaus eine Vorstellung da in was ein Atommeiler ist, wie er grob funktioniert und was die Gefahren sind. #chernobyl
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@SabrosiaVit@epicure.social · 5d ago
Decades of photographs showing the state of/decline of the areas around the site of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. The cleanup after the reactor meltdown & more recent de-commissioning of the other two reactors will continue into the 2060s. Nuclear power is not the final answer to our energy issues... For more evidence, have a look at the Fukushima cleanup, which is expected to take until the 2050s... https://www.nationalgeographic.com/photography/article/chernobyl-nuclear-disaster-forty-anniversary #NuclearPower #Radiation #Chernobyl #Fukushima
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@ScienceDesk@flipboard.social · Mar 27, 2026
After the 1986 explosion at Chernobyl’s Reactor Four, many presumed the land would be biologically dead for generations. “The pine forests closest to the plant absorbed such intense radiation that their needles turned an orange-red and died, creating what became known as the Red Forest,” author Katie Stacey writes. Today, some truly weird wildlife are getting by, if not thriving. Read more from @sciencefocus@flipboard.com: https://flip.it/O65kzn #Science #Chernobyl #Wildlife #Animals
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