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Use precise geolocation data. Actively scan device characteristics for identification. Store and/or access information on a ...
A genetic study conducted by the University of South Carolina and the National Human Genome Research Institute, published in ...
Decades after the explosion, the dogs of Chernobyl are still out there—pacing the quiet streets and raising new generations. They’ve made a life out of what was left behind.
When humans evacuated Chernobyl they were forced to leave their pets behind, and generations later hundreds of radiation-blasted dogs live on - very differently to other pooches ...
A recent study, published in PLOS ONE, examined dogs living near the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and those in the city, located just 10 miles (16 kilometers) away. Researchers wanted to understand ...
Chernobyl, for one, is now within the borders of Ukraine, and the destroyed reactor is now capped by a massive dome, known as New Safe Confinement. Oh, and the dogs are different, too.
For nearly 40 years, the Chernobyl exclusion zone (CEZ) has been a laboratory for scientists to study the long-term effects of radiation exposure. One of the ongoing subjects in this unintentional ...
Chernobyl dogs do show ‘dramatic’ genetic differences – but not because of radiation New study has implications for our understanding of nuclear radiation exposure effects on populations ...
The story of about 900 Chernobyl dogs adapting to radioactive environment reveals the ongoing impact of the nuclear disaster.
Dogs living near the nuclear disaster site in Chernobyl are evolving, and have mutated to develop an immunity to radiation.