Chernobyl: Nature takes back what humans left behind | DW English
In Chernobyl, wildlife is moving to villages that were abandoned after the nuclear disaster in 1986. Over the past 30 years, nature has been reclaiming the 30km zone around the former nuclear power plant in the Ukarain.
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Post Series: Ukraine
- 1.The Animals of Chernobyl | The New York Times
- 2.Chernobyl: What happened 30 years ago? BBC News
- 3.Chernobyl’s new ‘shield’ – BBC News
- 4.Chernobyl: Drone Footage Reveals an Abandoned City
- 5.Girl Tells the World That Down Syndrome Is ‘Not Scary’
- 6.30 Years After Chernobyl, Nature Is Thriving | National Geographic
- 7.The Animals of Chernobyl | The New York Times
- 8.Chernobyl: inside the exclusion zone
- 9.Wildlife Of Chernobyl
- 10.Chernobyl: Nature takes back what humans left behind | DW English
- 11.Chernobyl – Life In The Dead Zone [Full Documentary]
- 12.Chernobyl exclusion zone wildlife: Przewalski’s horses, june 2013
- 13.Wildlife flourishing in Chernobyl fallout zone thanks to lack of humans, say scientists
- 14.Chernobyl’s Radioactive Wildlife Full Documentary
- 15.The Dogs of Chernobyl – Abandoned In The Zone
- 16.Mutant Chernobyl Wolves are Spreading Across Europe
- 17.Chernobyl Wolf Pack
- 18.Wolves of Chernobyl Radio Active Animal Mutations Full Documentary