The Daily Galaxy on MSN
Scientists discover strange life thriving beneath Fukushima’s dead reactors, here’s what they found!
More than a decade after the devastating 2011 meltdown, life has been found thriving in the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant, a place once thought to be too radioactive for anything to survive.
Discover Magazine on MSN
Pig–boar hybrids are evolving in Fukushima — and rewriting what we know about hybridization
Learn how boar populations in Fukushima’s evacuation zone are evolving rapidly after mating with abandoned domesticated pigs.
MALIBU — In California, kelp is at once admired for its underwater beauty, grumbled over as a beach obstacle and served up on dinner plates. Now it is being used in the name of science. Researchers ...
The damaged Unit 1 reactor (back) and the exhaust stack shared by the Unit 1 and 2 reactors are seen at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, operated by Tokyo Electric Power Company Holdings ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. render of bacteria in biofilm In Earth's highly radioactive hotspots, life can get pretty strange – from fungus that seems to ...
The dumping of radioactive wastewater from the rubbished Fukushima nuclear reactor site in Japan was suspended for a day last March, after a 5.98-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of the site, ...
OKUMA, Japan (AP) — The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant's radiation levels have significantly dropped since the cataclysmic meltdown in Japan 14 years ago. Workers walk around in many areas ...
Time & Life Pictures/Getty ImagesUnder enemy fire, American Marines wade ashore at Cape Batangan, a rugged promontory some 20 miles down the coast from Chulai, reported to be a Vietcong stronghold, ...
On the same day that Japan's prime minister declared the country would re-start nuclear reactors shut down in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima power-plant disaster, the World Health Organization ...
Interdisciplinary experts urged increased actions to mitigate the effects of radiation on Earth and in space at Georgetown University’s annual Nuclear Security Summit from Feb. 4-6.
TOKYO — Japan said Tuesday it plans to use some slightly radioactive soil stored near the tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant on flower beds at Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba’s office to show it is ...
Overall, having any extra radiation in our lives probably isn’t as safe as any of us would like, but it seems from the available data, the Fukushima event may not create any more hazard than what we ...
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