Surviving in a poisoned land: Chernobyl's wildlife is different, but not in the ways you might think
It's 40 years since the Chernobyl disaster. This is what it has meant for wildlife living around the devastated nuclear power ...
"Dogs at Chernobyl are now genetically distinct … thanks to years of exposure to ionizing radiation, study finds." ...
In the novel When There Are Wolves Again by E.J. Swift, the Chernobyl disaster and its legacy is extrapolated to a near ...
Dagens.com on MSN
Chernobyl, 40 years on: How wildlife returned to one of the most toxic places on Earth
Forty years after the Chernobyl disaster, wildlife has returned in large numbers—suggesting that the absence of humans may ...
Humans seem to be worse than nuclear radiation for wildlife. Forty years after the Chernobyl disaster, the exclusion zone has ...
7don MSN
‘Nature has performed a factory reset’: Chernobyl has flourished into an unlikely wildlife refuge
Wild Przewalski horses graze in a forest inside the Chernobyl exclusion zone, Ukraine, Wednesday, April 8, 2026. Chornobyl is ...
The world’s rarest horses have found an unlikely home in one of Earth’s most contaminated places – and they’re thriving.
Wolves now prowl the vast no-man’s-land spanning Ukraine and Belarus, and brown bears have returned after more than a century ...
FORTY years on from the greatest nuclear disaster in history, a 1,000 square mile patch of land is still sealed off from the ...
Gray wolves now living in the Chernobyl exclusion zone also show a new genetic resistance to cancer, researchers have found.
The example that Chernobyl has provided of how the landscape, water dynamics and human behaviour affect radiation risk will ...
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