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Included in this category are non-free fair use images related to the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident, an important topic of unique historical significance. Media in category "Images related to the Chernobyl disaster"
The Chernobyl Trust Fund was created in 1991 by the United Nations to help victims of the Chernobyl accident. [127] It is administered by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs , which also manages strategy formulation, resource mobilization, and advocacy efforts. [ 128 ]
Igor Fedorovich Kostin (27 December 1936 – 9 June 2015) was one of the five photographers in the world to take pictures of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster near Pripyat in Ukraine, [1] on 26 April 1986. He was working for Novosti Press Agency (APN) as a photographer in Kyiv, Ukraine, when he represented Novosti to cover the nuclear accident in ...
The Elephant's Foot is the nickname given to the large mass of corium, composed of materials formed from molten concrete, sand, steel, uranium, and zirconium.The mass formed beneath Reactor 4 of the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant, near Pripyat, Ukraine, during the Chernobyl disaster of 26 April 1986, and is noted for its extreme radioactivity.
Anatoly Ivanovich Rasskazov (Russian: Анатолий Иванович Рассказов; 16 January 1941 – 17 February 2010) was a staff photographer and illustrator at the Soviet Chernobyl power station. He was the first person to photograph the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster. [1] [2]
The explosion and fire at the Chernobyl No. 4 reactor contaminated the soil, water and atmosphere with radioactive material equivalent to that of 20 times the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. [3] In the post-disaster cleanup operations, a majority of the pine trees were bulldozed and buried in trenches by the "liquidators".
By contrast, in 1986 the Soviet Union mishandled the Chernobyl nuclear explosion, in large part because the USSR was not prepared for such a disaster. Thirty-five years after Chernobyl, the U.S ...
David McMillan (born in 1945) is a Winnipeg photographer who has photographed the 1986 Chernobyl disaster 22 times over 30 years, starting in 1994. Early life and career