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Chernobyl retrospective

Seminars in Nuclear Medicine, 1988
On April 28, 1986 heavy radioactive fallout from an unknown source was reported from Sweden. Later, it was discovered that two days earlier, a nuclear power reactor at Chernobyl, in the Soviet Union, had exploded releasing an enormous cloud of effluent containing 40 million Ci of 131I, 3 million Ci of 137Cs, and 50 million Ci of xenon radioisotopes ...
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A Visit to Chernobyl

Science, 1987
Details of the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant were given by Soviet experts at a special International Atomic Energy Agency meeting in Vienna, Austria, in August 1986. Several unanswered questions were made much clearer by a visit to the decontaminated and operating power plant at Chernobyl and by discussions with Soviet scientists.
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The children of Chernobyl

Medical Journal of Australia, 1991
During the past twelve months much media attention has been focused on the plight of the children affected by the Chernobyl nuclear disaster in the Soviet Union. The visit to Australia by several groups of these children during 1991 has heightened community interest in the innocent victims of the world's worst nuclear accident.
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Chernobyl---20 years on

Journal of Radiological Protection, 2006
Twenty years ago on 26 April 1986, the Chernobyl nuclear reactor accident occurred (or, more precisely, the explosion that marked the start of the accident occurred - the resultant fire lasted several days). This is by far the largest unintentional release of radioactive material into the environment and caused widespread contamination in Europe, which
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Chernobyl

1987
This book examines the effects of the Chernobyl disaster. It describes the accident sequence, the radiological consequences in the USSR, and looks at an estimation of the radiation situation in Eastern Europe following the Chernobyl accident.
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Chernobyl

2013
Melanie Arndt reflects on her experiences of growing up east of the Iron Curtain during the Cold War—specifically as a child in East Germany and later as a volunteer in Minsk, Belarus. Her experience volunteering in Minsk, where she helped care for “Chernobyl children” during their recuperation, made her aware of how Chernobyl became a crucial ...
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Chernobyl and Thyroid

Thyroid, 1995
S, Yamashita, S, Nagataki
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