Morning Overview on MSN
Chernobyl’s mutant wolves evolved cancer resistance to survive the fallout
In the radioactive forests around Chernobyl, gray wolves have done what humans cannot: they have adapted to chronic radiation ...
Indigo Traveller on MSN
Chernobyl wasn’t destroyed in a moment, it was abandoned forever
Chernobyl inside the Red Zone felt unnatural and quiet. Homes, streets, and buildings remained exactly where they were left.
Scientists find that Chernobyl's grey wolves have evolved cancer-resilient genomes despite high radiation levels. This ...
On the northern edge of Ukraine, inside the 30-km (19-mile) exclusion zone surrounding the abandoned Chornobyl (commonly known as Chernobyl) nuclear plant, thousands of animals now roam freely through ...
Chernobyl Diaries A group of good-lookin’ young tourists in the Ukraine go sight-seeing in Prypiat, a city deserted after the next-door Chernobyl nuclear disaster in 1986. A fine plan, until mutants ...
More than 35 years after the world's worst nuclear accident, the dogs of Chernobyl roam among decaying, abandoned buildings in and around the closed plant – somehow still able to find food, breed and ...
CHERNOBYL, Ukraine — Workers at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant marked the 37th anniversary of the world's worst nuclear disaster Wednesday amid an ongoing war and nuclear threats, somberly laying ...
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