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Chernobyl, a Human No-Go Zone for 38 Years, Now a Wildlife Paradise

Mr. Nobody
7 min readApr 24, 2024

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The Lessons from Chernobyl’s Surviving Animals for Cancer Research in Humans

Nearly half a year has passed since Japan began discharging nuclear wastewater, and many are concerned about the emergence of mutated marine life.

This inevitably makes us wonder, does their nuclear wastewater truly have no impact on the ocean, or can marine life somehow be immune to nuclear radiation? Or has there been some suppression of information by officials?

It is also possible that six months is too short a period to observe significant changes in the polluted ocean.

Yet, there is another place on Earth that has suffered nuclear contamination, where the worst nuclear radiation disaster in history occurred.

Despite 38 years passing, except for research teams, no one dares to enter this exclusion zone.

And the mutations that the animals living there might have undergone are unimaginable!

That place is the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant!

What exactly happened at Chernobyl?

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Mr. Nobody
Mr. Nobody

Written by Mr. Nobody

Since I was young, I have always enjoyed reading biographies of historical figures, especially those about World War II, including documentaries and novels.

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