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Nature: Wildlife in Chernobyl almost 30 years after disaster |
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In Chernobyl Ukraine, 26 April 1986 disaster widely considered to have been the worst nuclear power plant accident in history of mankind. Reactor that blew up in its core released large quantities of radioactive particles into the atmosphere, which spread well over Western USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics which existed from 1921 to 1991) and Europe.
The Chernobyl catastrophe changed the history flow, surface and wildlife for many decades to come. Photographer Sergei Gaschak decided to photographed an area that is suppose to be uninhabitable to humans, the so called Chernobyl disaster’s fallout zone. The photographs bellow were took with the camera traps you can see above. In the last photo you can see the Gaschak planning and discussing the shots.
To learn more about the Chernobyl nuclear disaster go here: http://goo.gl/qvxWL
To learn more about the photographs, go here: http://goo.gl/Mw9Aq
| changed: mat (1st Feb 2013, 11:26 PM) |
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I love the feel to the first three photos. They are so beautiful and somehow hunting, especially if you know where they were taken and what happened 30 years ago, amazing. Great post Kimmy. |
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I guess wildlife returns there finally. Would be interesting to explore this area(I've seen some folks in survival gear like https://gritroutdoors.com/outdoor-surviv.... but it's still mostly pillaging stuff and a lot less "wildlife" focused). |
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Hi everyone Nature's resilience is truly remarkable. It's both heartbreaking and inspiring to see how wildlife has reclaimed Chernobyl, reminding us of the power of life's resurgence in adversity. |
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