Chernobyl1. Helicopt03_... ... 12. f421 13. f413 14. f412 15. f431 16. f411 17. 65813_cropped 18. image003 ... 24. sar |
![]() Add CommentRecent commentsholerificationisn t the concrete supposed to go on the floor?? Some-one was flinging on the walls.. Posted by Guest on Mon 26 Apr 2010 22:14:26 PDT as
Hey, find a online& ; club and play online Posted by Guest on Sun 20 Dec 2009 07:23:46 PST ajfasf@asdf.com
http://google.com Posted by Guest on Wed 05 Aug 2009 15:47:00 PDT dragonfromthedepths@hotmail.comit still unknown but watch the tv programme 500 years after people it seemed that nature can absorb the natural radiants thrown by the reactors and grow in the place where humans no longer thrive well that's my opinion Posted by Guest on Tue 23 Dec 2008 14:46:38 PST Vasiliyto add to Raph's comment why are there oversised vegis growing around the area Posted by Guest on Tue 17 Jun 2008 07:21:26 PDT Raph@Kasag...i'm not doubting of you, but if radioactivity kills everything, why are there so many trees and other plants growing in Pripyat ? thanks Posted by Guest on Mon 09 Jun 2008 16:01:00 PDT Mycroftcable of koroba = cable ducts Posted by Guest on Mon 26 May 2008 19:01:31 PDT npj.ru/arioch| show full
Matt: 3 Islands in USA was quite before Chernobyl. however You were more lucky. Posted by Guest on Fri 27 Apr 2007 07:57:46 PDT ColumbineGirl| show fullOk, about the thousands of people who died, check out the discussion on page 21. The report that you're thinking of only said that 120,000 of the affected people died. However, they did not all die of radiation poisoning. Anyone can die with or without ... Posted by Guest on Wed 04 Apr 2007 10:49:19 PDT jddWhile the lava was liquid it WAS capable of melting through steel and concrete, because obviously it was partially liquid uranium, and uranium has a much higher melting point than steel. Posted by Guest on Tue 03 Apr 2007 12:47:45 PDT Dave clash_city_rocker90@hotmail.comI was reading somewhere, that hundreds of thousands of people died as a result, and not just the publicized 39. Posted by Guest on Sat 03 Feb 2007 11:04:12 PST ColumbineGirlSeriously. Posted by Guest on Tue 09 Jan 2007 20:03:03 PST DanielThe Elephants Foot is at the back there, that room must be one seriously no go area. Posted by Guest on Tue 09 Jan 2007 18:18:50 PST kidjust out of curiosity, does the lava stuff eat through concrete? Posted by Guest on Sun 26 Nov 2006 14:17:41 PST ColumbineGirl| show fullTrue about the Nukes. I'd live next door to 3 Mile Island or any other nuclear power plant in the West. (You get more radiation from a day in the sun than you do living for years by 3 Mile.) It's safer than living by a coal mine or power plant, anyway. ... Posted by Guest on Sun 26 Nov 2006 14:16:31 PST streakyBut yeah, scary - it's feels a bit like something from the movies alien or event horizon, don't think I could go in there, even if there was no radiation - very strange Posted by Guest on Thu 13 Jul 2006 13:01:05 PDT streaky| show full
"Twenty years after the initial explosion there's enough radiation to kill you instantly. And people want to build more reactors in America. Unbelievable." Posted by Guest on Thu 13 Jul 2006 12:59:51 PDT Alan| show full
" ... I hope the person that took this picture was waring a radioactive proof suite while taking this picture ... " Posted by Guest on Tue 06 Jun 2006 02:26:46 PDT Kasag| show full@Mat ..cloth and metal cant survive ..thay are slowley breaking down also ..radeation afects aney matter it comes in cotact with ..slowley breaking it down on a atomic level ...it just kills liveing things faster by breaking down our nervous system and ... Posted by Guest on Sun 21 May 2006 00:08:39 PDT TimI hope the person that took this picture was waring a radioactive proof suite while taking this picture Posted by Guest on Wed 17 May 2006 13:47:49 PDT Matt| show fullDoes anyone else find this as intesely scary as I do? The fact that there's an entire world beneath radiation in which cloth and metal can survive, even some paper, and yet a human cannot venture into it? Twenty years after the initial explosion there's... Posted by Guest on Sun 07 May 2006 23:27:43 PDT duralinux@gmail.comYeah they do look like bags... imagine being there and tasting the metallic air. Posted by Guest on Thu 27 Apr 2006 10:34:26 PDT visitorPoured concrete or dumped? Those look like full or partially full bags of concrete? Not that i'd blame anyone for getting the heck out of there Posted by Guest on Mon 13 Mar 2006 20:28:00 PST Add Comment |
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