Effects of the Chernobyl disaster

The estimated number of deaths from the Chernobyl nuclear disaster
A map showing caesium-137 contamination in the Chornobyl area in 1996

The 1986 Chernobyl disaster triggered the release of radioactive contamination into the atmosphere in the form of both particulate and gaseous radioisotopes. As of 2022, it was the world's largest known release of radioactivity into the environment.

The work of the Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment (SCOPE), suggests that the Chernobyl incident cannot be directly compared to atmospheric tests of nuclear weapons by simply saying that it's better or worse. This is partly because the isotopes released at Chernobyl tended to be longer-lived than those released by the detonation of atomic bombs.[citation needed]

The economic damage caused by the disaster is estimated at $235 billion.[1]

Radiation effects on humans[edit]

Radiation exposure to first responders at Chernobyl in comparison to a range of situations, from normal activities up to nuclear accident. Each step up the scale indicates a tenfold increase in radiation level.

In a 2009 United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) study, the Chernobyl accident had by 2005 caused 61,200 man-Sv of radiation exposure to recovery workers and evacuees, 125,000 man-Sv to the populace of Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia, and a dose to most other European countries amounting to 115,000 man-Sv. The report estimated a further 25% more exposure would be received from residual radioisotopes after 2005.[2] The global collective dose from Chernobyl was earlier estimated by UNSCEAR in 1988 to be "600,000 man Sv, equivalent on average to 21 additional days of world exposure to natural background radiation."[3]

Dose to the general public within 30 km of the plant[edit]

The inhalation dose (internal dose) for the public during the time of the accident and their evacuation from the area in what is now the 30 km evacuation zone around the plant has been estimated, based on ground deposition of caesium-137, to be between 3 and 150 mSv.

Thyroid doses for adults around the Chernobyl area were estimated to be between 20 and 1000 mSv, while for one-year-old infants, these estimates were higher, at 20 to 6000 mSv. For those who left the area soon after the accident, the internal dose due to inhalation was 8 to 13 times higher than the external dose due to gamma/beta emitters. For those who remained until later (day 10 or later), the inhalation dose was 50 to 70% higher than the dose due to external exposure. The majority of the dose was due to iodine-131 (about 40%) and tellurium and rubidium isotopes (about 20 to 30% for Rb and Te).[4]

The ingestion doses in this same group of people have also been estimated using the cesium activity per unit of area, isotope ratios, an average day of evacuation, intake rate of milk and green vegetables, and what is known about the transfer of radioactivity via plants and animals to humans. For adults, the dose has been estimated to be between 3 and 180 mSv, while for one-year-old infants, a dose of between 20 and 1300 mSv has been estimated. Again, the majority of the dose was thought to be due to iodine-131.[5]

Childhood exposure[edit]

Ukraine, Belarus and parts of Russia were exposed to radiation after the Chernobyl disaster in 1986, but prior to the disaster the number of children affected by thyroid cancer was relatively low globally. Every year about, "0.1–2.2 individuals per million of all aged under 15 years old world wide" were affected by thyroid cancer.[6] Research has shown after the Chernobyl disaster the level of thyroid cancer, particularly in children near the radiation exposure, increased.[7] Although iodine-131 has a short half-life compared to other radioactive isotopes, iodine-131 made its way through the food chain through a milk-to-consumer pathway. 95% of iodine-131 was ingested through milk after the disaster.[8] Communities were unaware of the contamination deposited in soil and the transforming capabilities of radiation into other food sources. Children also absorbed radiation after drinking milk.[9]

The absorption rate discovered in children has also shown to be inversely proportional to age.[10] There is a high rate of thyroid cancer among children less than 15 years old who were exposed to the radiation after the disaster and an increasing level of dosage as age decreases. This inverse proportion could be explained by the way in which children absorb iodine-131. Children have smaller thyroid glands compared to adults and have a different dosage response after the ingestion of iodine-131.[10] A cohort study conducted in 2013 discovered a similar trend between age and dosage response. The cohort was composed of 12,000 participants, all of which were exposed to the radiation in Belarus and reported to be under the age of 18 at the time of the exposure.[11]

Future study[edit]

Studying the populations that were exposed to radiation after the Chernobyl accident has provided data linking exposure to radiation and the future development of cancer.

Cases of pediatric thyroid cancer, likely caused by absorption of Iodine-131 into the thyroid gland, increased in Ukraine and Belarus 3 to 4 years after the accident. Children were most at risk, and cases did not seem to increase in adults. The greatest increase was seen in children who were the youngest at the time of exposure, and most of the pediatric thyroid cases were reported in Gomel, Belarus, where the population was exposed to the highest levels of contamination. The majority of the cases that appeared in the exposed population were papillary thyroid cancer.[12]

Before the accident, the rate of thyroid cancer in children in Belarus was less than 1 per million. By 1995, nine years after the disaster, the number of cases of pediatric thyroid cancer in Gomel Oblast rose to 100 per million per year. Even as adults those who were exposed to the radiation as children may still be at risk of developing thyroid cancer decades after the exposure. It is important to study the at risk population throughout their lives, and observe if different patterns arise in tumors that develop with longer latency.[13]

A group of experts who are part of the Agenda for Research on Chernobyl Health (ARCH) have proposed a series of potential studies that would examine the continued effects from the Chernobyl accident, and provide more information on the full extent of related health consequences. Results from lifelong observation of the exposed population could provide more information on risks as well as future protection against radiation exposure.[12]

Short-term health effects and immediate results[edit]

The explosion at the power station and subsequent fires inside the remains of the reactor resulted in the development and dispersal of a radioactive cloud which drifted not only over Russia, Belarus, and Ukraine, but also over most of Europe[14] and as far as Canada.[15][16] The initial evidence that a release of radioactive material had occurred came not from Soviet sources, but from Sweden, where on 28 April,[17] two days after the disaster itself, workers at the Forsmark Nuclear Power Plant, approximately 1100 km from the Chernobyl site were found to have radioactive particles on their clothing.

It was Sweden's search for the source of the radioactivity, after they had determined there was no leak at the Swedish plant, that led to the first hint of a critical incident in the Western Soviet Union.

Contamination from the Chernobyl disaster was not evenly spread across the surrounding countryside but scattered irregularly depending on weather conditions. Reports from Soviet and Western scientists indicate that Belarus received about 60% of the contamination that fell on the former Soviet Union. A large area in Russia south of Bryansk was also contaminated, as were parts of northwestern Ukraine.

203 people were hospitalized, of whom 31 died. 28 of them died from acute radiation exposure. Most of these were fire and rescue workers trying to bring the disaster under control, who were not aware of how dangerous the radiation exposure from the smoke was. (For a discussion of the more important isotopes in fallout see fission products). 135,000 people were evacuated from the area, including 50,000 from the nearby town of Pripyat, Ukraine. Health officials have predicted that over the next 70 years there will be a 28% increase in cancer rates in much of the population which was exposed to the 5–12 EBq (depending on source) of radioactive contamination released from the reactor.

Soviet scientists reported that the Chernobyl Unit 4 reactor contained about 180–190 metric tons of uranium dioxide fuel and fission products. Estimates of the amount of this material that escaped range from 5 to 30%. Because of the heat of the fire, and with no containment building to stop it, part of the ejected fuel was vaporized or particularized and rose into the atmosphere, where it spread.

Workers and "liquidators"[edit]

Soviet medal awarded to 600,000+ liquidators.

The workers involved in the recovery and clean up after the disaster, called "liquidators", received high doses of radiation. In most cases, these workers were not equipped with individual dosimeters to measure the amount of radiation received, so experts could only estimate their doses. Even where dosimeters were used, dosimetric procedures varied - some workers are thought to have been given more accurate estimated doses than others.[citation needed] According to Soviet estimates, between 300,000 and 600,000 people were involved in the cleanup of the 30 km evacuation zone around the reactor, but many of them entered the zone two years after the disaster.[18]

Estimates of the number of "liquidators" vary; the World Health Organization, for example, puts the figure at about 600,000; Russia lists as liquidators some people who did not work in contaminated areas.[citation needed][19] In the first year after the disaster, the number of cleanup workers in the zone was estimated to be 2,000. These workers received an estimated average dose of 165 millisieverts (16.5 REM).

Studies of the increase in DNA mutations in the children of liquidators vary in their conclusions. One study indentified a sevenfold increase in DNA mutations in children of liquidators conceived after the accident, when compared to their siblings that were conceived before, [20] but another claimed to find no increase in developmental anomalies or a statistically significant increase in the frequencies of germline mutations in their progeny.[21]

Evacuation[edit]

Soviet Military authorities started evacuating people from the area around Chernobyl on the second day after the disaster (after about 36 hours). By May 1986, about a month later, all those living within a 30 km (19 mi) radius of the plant (about 116,000 people) had been relocated. This area is often referred to as the zone of alienation. However, radiation affected the environment over a much wider scale than this 30 km radius encloses.

According to reports from Soviet scientists, 28,000 square kilometers (km2, or 10,800 square miles, mi2) were contaminated by caesium-137 to levels greater than 185 kBq per square meter. 830,000 people lived in this area. About 10,500 km 2 (4,000 mi2) were contaminated by caesium-137 to levels greater than 555 kBq/m2. Of this total, roughly 7,000 km2 (2,700 mi2) lie in Belarus, 2,000 km2 (800 mi2) in the Russian Federation and 1,500 km2 (580 mi2) in Ukraine. About 250,000 people lived in this area. These reported data were corroborated by the International Chernobyl Project.[22]

Civilians[edit]

Some children in the contaminated areas were exposed to high thyroid doses of up to 50 gray (Gy)[citation needed], mostly due to an intake of radioactive iodine-131 (a relatively short-lived isotope with a half-life of 8 days) from contaminated milk produced locally.[23] Several studies[which?][24] have found that the incidence of thyroid cancer among children in Belarus, Ukraine, and Russia has risen since the Chernobyl disaster. The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) notes "1800 documented cases of thyroid cancer in children who were between 0 and 14 years of age when the disaster occurred, which is far higher than normal",[25] although this source fails to note the expected rate. The childhood thyroid cancers that have appeared are of an aggressive type but, if detected early, can be treated. Treatment entails surgery followed by iodine-131 therapy for any metastases. To date, such treatment appears to have been successful in the vast majority of cases.[26]

Late in 1995, the World Health Organization (WHO) linked nearly 700 cases of thyroid cancer among children and adolescents to the Chernobyl disaster, and among these, some 10 deaths are attributed to radiation. However, the rapid increase in thyroid cancers detected suggests some of this increase may be an artifact of the screening process.[27] Typical latency time of radiation-induced thyroid cancer is about 10 years, but the increase in childhood thyroid cancers in some regions was observed as early as 1987.

Plant and animal health[edit]

An exhibit of a piglet with dipygus at the Ukrainian National Chernobyl Museum. It is possible that birth defects are higher in this area.[28]

A swath of pine forest killed by acute radiation was named the Red Forest. The dead pines were bulldozed and buried. Livestock were removed during the human evacuations.[29] Elsewhere in Europe, levels of radioactivity were examined in various natural food stocks. In both Sweden and Finland, fish in deep freshwater lakes were banned for resale and landowners were advised not to consume certain types.[30]

Animals living in contaminated areas in and around Chernobyl developed side effects caused by the initial levels of radiation. When the disaster first occurred, the health and reproductive ability of animals and plants were negatively affected for the first six months.

Invertebrate populations (including bumblebees, butterflies, grasshoppers, dragonflies, and spiders) decreased. As of 2009, most radioactivity around Chernobyl was located in the top layer of soil, where many invertebrates live or lay their eggs.[31]

Radionuclides migrate through either soil diffusion or transportation within the soil solution. The effects of ionizing radiation on plants and trees in particular depends on factors that include climatic conditions, the mechanism of radiation deposition, and the soil type. Altitude, soil disturbance, and biological activity are also factors that influence the amount of radioisotopes in soil.[32] Radiated vegetation affects organisms further up the food chain. Upper-level trophic organisms may have received less contamination, due to their ability to be more mobile and feed from multiple areas.[33]

The amount of radioactive nuclides found to have been deposited into surrounding lakes has increased the normal baseline radioactive amounts by 100 percent. Most of the radionuclides in surrounding water areas were found in the sediments at the bottom of the lakes. There has been a high incidence of chromosomal changes in plant and animal aquatic organisms, and this generally has correlated with the contamination and resulting genetic instability. Most of the lakes and rivers surrounding the Chernobyl exclusion zone are still contaminated with radionuclides (and will be for many years to come) as the natural decontamination processes of nuclides with longer half-lives can take years.[34]

One of the mechanisms by which radionuclides were passed to humans was through the ingestion of milk from contaminated cows. Most of the rough grazing that the cows took part in contained plant species such as coarse grasses, sedges, rushes, and plants such as heather (also known as Calluna vulgaris). These plant species grow in soils that are high in organic matter, low in pH, and are often well hydrated, thus making the storage and intake of these radionuclides more feasible and efficient.[35]

Shortly after the Chernobyl accident, high levels of radionuclides were found in the milk and were a direct result of contaminated feeding. Within two months of banning most of the milk that was being produced in the affected areas, officials had phased out the majority of the contaminated feed that was available to the cows and much of the contamination was isolated. In humans, ingestion of milk containing abnormally high levels of iodine radionuclides was the precursor for thyroid disease, especially in children and in the immunocompromised.[35]

Due to the bioaccumulation of caesium-137, some mushrooms as well as wild animals which eat them, e.g. wild boars hunted in Germany and deer in Austria, may have levels which are not considered safe for human consumption.[36] Mandatory radioactivity testing of sheep in parts of the UK that graze on lands with contaminated peat was lifted in 2012.[37]

While effects on the immediate physical health of individual animals within the affected area tended to be negative, population levels of animals in the affected areas began to increase following the evacuation of humans.[38] In the 1996 BBC Horizon documentary 'Inside Chernobyl's Sarcophagus', birds are seen flying in and out of large holes in the structure itself. Other casual observations also reported an increase in biodiversity due to the reduced human presence.[39]

Human pregnancy[edit]

Despite spurious studies from Germany and Turkey, the only robust evidence of negative pregnancy outcomes that transpired after the accident was the increase in elective abortions, these "indirect effects", in Greece, Denmark, Italy etc., have been attributed to "anxieties created" by the media.[40]

Researchers at the time knew that high doses of radiation increase the rate of physiological pregnancy and fetal abnormalities, but select researchers who were familiar with both the prior human exposure data and animal testing knew that, unlike the dominant linear no-threshold model of radiation and cancer rate increases, the "Malformation of organs appears to be a deterministic effect (an effect not caused by chance) with a threshold dose" below which no rate increase is observed.[41] Frank Castronovo of the Harvard Medical School discussed this teratology (birth defects) issue in 1999, publishing a review of dose reconstructions and the available pregnancy data following the Chernobyl accident, which included data from Kyiv's two largest obstetrics hospitals.[41]

Castronovo concludes that "the lay press with newspaper reporters playing up anecdotal stories of children with birth defects" and dubious studies flawed by "selection bias", are the two primary factors causing the persistent belief that Chernobyl increased the background rate of birth defects. However, the data does not support this perception because, since no pregnant individuals took part in the most radioactive liquidator operations, no pregnant individuals were exposed to the threshold dose.[41]

Despite Castronovo's statements, Karl Sperling, Heidemarie Neitzel and Hagen Scherb reported that the prevalence of Down syndrome (trisomy 21) in West Berlin, Germany, peaked 9 months following the main fallout.[ 11, 12] From 1980 to 1986 the birth prevalence of Down syndrome was quite stable (i.e., 1.35–1.59 per 1,000 live births [27–31 cases]). In 1987, 46 cases were diagnosed (prevalence = 2.11 per 1,000 live births) and most of the increase resulted from a cluster of 12 children born in January 1987. The prevalence of Down Syndrome in 1988 was 1.77, and in 1989, it reached pre-Chernobyl values. The authors noted that the cluster of children would have been conceived when radioactive clouds containing radionucleotides with short half-lives, like iodine, would have been covering the region and also that the isolated geographical position of West Berlin prior to reunification, the free genetic counseling, and complete coverage of the population through one central cytogenetic laboratory supported completeness of case ascertainment; in addition, constant culture preparation and analysis protocols ensure a high quality of data.[42]

Long-term health effects[edit]

Science and politics: the problem of epidemiological studies[edit]

An abandoned village near Pripyat, close to Chernobyl.

The issue of long-term effects of the Chernobyl disaster on civilians is controversial. Over 300,000 people were resettled because of the disaster. Millions lived and continue to live in the contaminated area.[43] On the other hand, most of those affected received relatively low doses of radiation; there is little evidence of increased mortality, cancers or birth defects among them; and when such evidence is present, existence of a causal link to radioactive contamination is uncertain.[44]

An increased incidence of thyroid cancer among children in areas of Belarus, Ukraine and Russia affected by the Chernobyl disaster has been established as a result of screening programs[45] and, in the case of Belarus, an established cancer registry. The findings of most epidemiological studies must be considered interim, say experts, as analysis of the health effects of the disaster is an ongoing process.[46] Multilevel modelling indicates that long-term psychological distress among Belarusians affected by the Chernobyl disaster is better predicted by stress-moderating psychosocial factors present in one's daily life than by level of residential radiation contamination.[47]

Epidemiological studies have been hampered in Ukraine, Russian Federation and Belarus by a lack of funds, an infrastructure with little experience in chronic disease epidemiology, poor communication facilities, public health issues and a political culture of secrecy and deception. Emphasis has been placed on screening rather than on well-designed epidemiological studies. International efforts to organize such studies have been slowed in particular by the lack of a suitable scientific infrastructure.

The political nature of nuclear energy has affected scientific studies. In Belarus, Yury Bandazhevsky, a scientist who questioned the official estimates of Chernobyl's consequences and the relevancy of the official maximum limit of 1,000 Bq/kg, was imprisoned from 2001 to 2005. Bandazhevsky and some human rights groups allege his imprisonment was a reprisal for his publication of reports critical of the official research being conducted into the Chernobyl incident.

The activities undertaken by Belarus and Ukraine in response to the disaster — remediation of the environment, evacuation and resettlement, development of uncontaminated food sources and food distribution channels, and public health measures — have overburdened the governments of those countries. International agencies and foreign governments have provided logistic and humanitarian assistance. In addition, the work of the European Commission and World Health Organization in strengthening the epidemiological research infrastructure in Russia, Ukraine and Belarus is laying the basis for advances in these countries' general ability to conduct epidemiological studies.

Caesium radioisotopes[edit]

The main health concern initially involved radioactive iodine, with a half-life of eight days. Today, there is concern about contamination of the soil with strontium-90 and caesium-137, which have half-lives of about 30 years. The highest levels of caesium-137 are found in the surface layers of the soil where they are absorbed by plants, insects and mushrooms, which then enter the local food supply [48]). Some scientists fear that radioactivity will affect the local population for the next several generations. Note that caesium is not mobile in most soils because it binds to the clay minerals.[49][50][51]

Tests (c. 1997) showed that caesium-137 levels in trees were continuing to rise. It is unknown if this is still the case. There is evidence that contamination is migrating into underground aquifers and closed bodies of water such as lakes and ponds (2001, Germenchuk). The main source of elimination is predicted to be natural decay of caesium-137 to stable barium-137, since runoff by rain and groundwater has been demonstrated to be negligible. In 2021, Italian researcher Venturi reported the first correlations between caesium-137, pancreas and pancreatic cancer with the role of non-radioactive caesium in biology and of caesium-137 in chronic pancreatitis and in diabetes of pancreatic origin (Type 3c).[52]

Thyroid cancer[edit]

An increased incidence of thyroid cancer was observed for about 4 years after the accident and slowed in 2005.[53] The increase in incidence of thyroid cancer happened amongst individuals who were adolescents and young children living during the time of the accident, and residing in the most contaminated areas. High levels of radioactive iodine were released in the environment from the Chernobyl reactor after the accident, and accumulated in pastures which were eaten by cows. The milk was later consumed by children who already had an iodine deficient diet, therefore causing more of the radioactive iodine to be accumulated. Radioactive iodine has a short half-life of 8.02 days; if the contaminated milk had been avoided or stopped, it is likely that most of the rise in radiation-induced thyroid cancer wouldn't have happened.

Within the highly contaminated areas – Belarus, the Russian Federation and Ukraine, there were around 5000 cases of thyroid cancer that have been diagnosed since the accident. These cases were found in individuals who were aged 18 and younger during the time of the accident.[7]

Supported by the Russian Federation and Ukraine, The European Commission, the National Cancer Institute of the US, and the Sasakawa Memorial Health Foundation, The Chernobyl Tissue Bank (CTB) was created in 1998, 6 years after published research showed a rise in childhood thyroid cancer. The project is the first international co-operation that collects biological samples from patients exposed to radioiodine during childhood. It started collecting a variety of biological samples from patients on 1 October 1998 and since July 2001 has been a source for ethically available tissue samples - specifically extracted nucleic acids and tissue sections - for 21 research projects in Japan, Europe and the USA. The CTB serves as a model for tissue banking for cancer research in the molecular age.[54]

Contamination in the food supply[edit]

Twenty-five years after the incident, restriction orders had remained in place in the production, transportation and consumption of food contaminated by Chernobyl fallout. In the UK, only in 2012 was the mandatory radioactivity testing of sheep in contaminated parts of the UK that graze on lands was lifted. They covered 369 farms on 750 km2 and 200,000 sheep. In parts of Sweden and Finland, restrictions are in place on stock animals, including reindeer, in natural and near-natural environments.[55]

"In certain regions of Germany, Austria, Italy, Sweden, Finland, Lithuania and Poland, wild game (including boar and deer), wild mushrooms, berries and carnivorous fish from lakes reach levels of several thousand Bq per kg of caesium-137", while "in Germany, caesium-137 levels in wild boar muscle reached 40,000 Bq/kg. The average level is 6,800 Bq/kg, more than ten times the EU limit of 600 Bq/kg", according to the TORCH 2006 report. The European Commission has stated that "The restrictions on certain foodstuffs from certain Member States must therefore continue to be maintained for years to come".[55]

As of 2009, sheep farmed in some areas of the UK are still subject to inspection which may lead to them being prohibited from entering the human food chain because of contamination arising from the accident:

Some of this radioactivity, predominantly radiocaesium-137, was deposited on certain upland areas of the UK, where sheep-farming is the primary land-use. Due to the particular chemical and physical properties of the peaty soil types present in these upland areas, the radiocaesium is still able to pass easily from soil to grass and hence accumulate in sheep. A maximum limit of 1,000 becquerels per kilogramme (Bq/kg) of radiocaesium is applied to sheep meat affected by the accident to protect consumers. This limit was introduced in the UK in 1986, based on advice from the European Commission's Article 31 group of experts. Under power provided under the Food and Environment Protection Act 1985 (FEPA), Emergency Orders have been used since 1986 to impose restrictions on the movement and sale of sheep exceeding the limit in certain parts of Cumbria, North Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland... When the Emergency Orders were introduced in 1986, the Restricted Areas were large, covering almost 9,000 farms, and over 4 million sheep. Since 1986, the areas covered by restrictions have dramatically decreased and now cover 369 farms, or part farms, and around 200,000 sheep. This represents a reduction of over 95% since 1986, with only limited areas of Cumbria, South Western Scotland and North Wales, covered by restrictions.[56]

369 farms and 190,000 sheep are still affected, a reduction of 95% since 1986, when 9,700 farms and 4,225,000 sheep were under restriction across the United Kingdom.[57] Restrictions were finally lifted in 2012.[58]

In Norway, the Sami people were affected by contaminated food (the reindeer had been contaminated by eating lichen, which accumulates some types of radioactivity emitters).[59]

Data from a long-term monitoring program from 1998 to 2015 (The Korma Report II)[60] shows a significant decrease in internal radiation exposure of the inhabitants of small villages in Belarus 80 km north of Gomel. Resettlement may even be possible in parts of the prohibited areas provided that people comply with appropriate dietary rules.

A 2021 study based on whole-genome sequencing of children of parents employed as liquidators in Chernobyl indicated no trans-generational genetic effects of exposure of parents to ionizing radiation.[61]

Long-term effects on plant and animal health[edit]

Earth Observing-1 image of the reactor and surrounding area in April 2009.

Over time there have been many reports documenting and discussing the prevalence and health of plants and animals within the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone. The absence of humans from the Exclusion Zone has made it attractive to wildlife, which now inhabit the area in larger numbers. This has led some scientists and reporters to describe the area as a natural wildlife sanctuary, and to enthuse about the ability of wildlife in the area to recover.[38][62]

However, the mere presence of wildlife does not present a complete picture: the ongoing health of individuals and the health of the ecosystems in which they live are also of concern. These issues are difficult to study because many factors interact. Radiologic tolerance and the effects of fallout contamination vary with different species. In addition to ongoing low-dose radiation and quality of local habitat, it has been suggested that fauna in the area may inherit a higher likelihood for genetic damage from ancestors affected by the initial high doses of radiation.[38][62]

Radiation levels[edit]

According to reports from Soviet scientists at the First International Conference on the Biological and Radiological Aspects of the Chernobyl Accident (September 1990), fallout levels in the 10 km zone around the plant were as high as 4.81 GBq/m2. The so-called "Red Forest" (or "Rusted Forest") is the swath of pine trees,[63] located immediately behind the reactor complex within the 10 km zone, which were killed off by heavy radioactive fallout. The forest is so named because in the days following the disaster the trees appeared to have a deep red hue as they died because of extremely heavy radioactive fallout. In the post-disaster cleanup operations, a majority of the 10 km2 forest was bulldozed and buried. The site of the Red Forest remains one of the most contaminated areas in the world.[64]

Population density[edit]

In the decades following the evacuation of its human population due to the disaster, the 30 km (19-mile) "exclusion zone" surrounding the Chernobyl disaster has become a de facto wildlife sanctuary. Animals have reclaimed the land including species such as the Przewalski's horse, Eurasian lynx, wild boar, grey wolf, elk, red deer, moose, brown bear, turtle, voles, mice, shrews, European badger, Eurasian beaver, raccoon dog, red fox, roe deer, European bison, black stork, golden eagle, white-tailed eagle and eagle owl.[65][29][66]

A 2015 study found similar numbers of mammals in the zone compared to nearby similar nature reserves.[67][68] Long-term empirical data showed no evidence of a negative influence of radiation on mammal abundance.[69]

In 2007, the Ukrainian government designated the Exclusion Zone as a wildlife sanctuary, and at 488.7 km2 it is one of the largest wildlife sanctuaries in Europe.[29] In 2016, the Ukrainian government designated its part of the area as a radiological and environmental biosphere reserve[70] as part of a six-year project funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF).[71]

Health impacts[edit]

According to a 2005 U.N. report, wildlife has returned despite radiation levels that are presently 10 to 100 times higher than normal background radiation. Radiation levels were significantly higher soon after the accident, but have fallen since then because of radioactive decay.[72]

While there are demonstrably populations of a wide variety of species within the zone, there are still concerns about the ongoing health of individuals within those populations and their ability to reproduce. Møller and Mousseau have published the results of the largest census of animal life in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.[73] It said, contrary to the Chernobyl Forum's 2005 report[74] that the biodiversity of insects, birds and mammals in the exclusion zone is declining.[73][75]

Møller et al. (2005) suggested that the reproductive success and annual survival rates of barn swallows are lower in the Exclusion Zone; 28% of barn swallows inhabiting Chernobyl return each year, while at a control area at Kanev, 250 km to the southeast, the return rate is around 40%.[76][77]

Barn swallows (Hirundo rustica) sampled between 1991 and 2006 in the Chernobyl exclusion zone are also claimed to display an increased rate of physical abnormalities compared to swallows from uncontaminated areas. Møller et al. (2007) reported an elevated frequency of eleven categories of physical abnormalities including such as partially albinistic plumage, deformed toes, tumors, deformed tail feathers, deformed beaks, and deformed air sacks. Abnormal barn swallows mated with lower frequency, and had a reduced viability in the wild and a decrease in fitness. Effects were attributed to radiation exposure and elevated teratogenic effects of radioactive isotopes in the environment.[78][79]

Smith et al. (2008) have disputed Møller's findings and instead proposed that a lack of human influence in the Exclusion Zone locally reduced the swallows' insect prey and that radiation levels across the vast majority of the exclusion zone are now too low to have an observable negative effect.[80] The criticisms were responded to in the same issue by Møller et al. (2008).[81] It is possible that barn swallows are vulnerable to elevated levels of ionizing radiation because they are migratory; they arrive in the exclusion area exhausted and with depleted reserves of radio-protective antioxidants after their journey.[76]

Oxidative stress and low levels of antioxidants can affect the development of the nervous system, including reduced brain size and impaired cognitive abilities. It has been reported that birds living in contaminated areas have smaller brains, which has shown to be a deficit to viability in the wild.[82]

Possible adaptation[edit]

It has been suggested that some plants and animals are able to adapt to the increased radiation levels present in and around Chernobyl.[38][83] Further research is needed to assess the long-term health effects of elevated ionizing radiation from Chernobyl on flora and fauna.[62][72]

Several research groups have suggested that plants in the area have adapted to cope with the high radiation levels, for example by increasing the activity of DNA cellular repair machinery and by hypermethylation.[83][84][85][86] Arabidopsis, a plant native to Chernobyl, was able to resist high concentrations of ionizing radiation and resist forming mutations. This species of plant has been able to develop mechanisms to tolerate chronic radiation that would otherwise be harmful or lethal to other species.[83]

Various birds in the area may have adapted to lower levels of radiation by producing more antioxidants, such as glutathione, to help mitigate oxidative stress.[87]

Using robots, researchers have retrieved samples of highly melanized black fungus from the walls of the reactor core itself. It has been shown that certain species of fungus, such as Cryptococcus neoformans and Cladosporium, can actually thrive in a radioactive environment, growing better than non-melanized variants, implying that they use melanin to harness the energy of ionizing radiation from the reactor.[88][89][90]

Chernobyl Forum report and criticisms[edit]

In September 2005, a comprehensive report was published by the Chernobyl Forum, composed of agencies that included the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the World Health Organization (WHO), United Nations bodies and the Governments of Belarus, the Russian Federation and Ukraine. This report titled: "Chernobyl's legacy: Health, Environmental and Socio-Economic Impacts", authored by about 100 recognized experts, put the total predicted number of deaths due to the disaster around 4,000, of which 2,200 deaths are expected to be in the ranks of 200,000 liquidators. This predicted death toll includes the 47 workers who died of acute radiation syndrome as a direct result of radiation from the disaster, nine children who died from thyroid cancer and an estimated 4000 people who could die from cancer as a result of exposure to radiation. This number was updated to 9,000 excess cancer deaths.[91]

An IAEA press officer admitted that the 4,000 figure was given prominence in the report "...to counter the much higher estimates which had previously been seen. ... "It was a bold action to put out a new figure that was much less than conventional wisdom.""[92]

The report stated that, apart from a 30 kilometre area around the site and a few restricted lakes and forests, radiation levels had returned to acceptable levels.[93][94]

The methodology of the Chernobyl Forum report, supported by Elisabeth Cardis of the International Agency for Research on Cancer,[95] has been disputed by some advocacy organizations opposed to nuclear energy, such as Greenpeace and the International Physicians for Prevention of Nuclear Warfare (IPPNW), as well as some individuals such as Michel Fernex, retired medical doctor from the WHO, and campaigner Dr. Christopher Busby (Green Audit, LLRC). They criticized the restriction of the Forum's study to Belarus, Ukraine and Russia. Furthermore, it only studied the case of 200,000 people involved in the cleanup, and the 400,000 most directly affected by the released radioactivity. German Green Party Member of the European Parliament Rebecca Harms, commissioned a report on Chernobyl in 2006 (TORCH, The Other Report on Chernobyl). The 2006 TORCH report claimed that:

In terms of their surface areas, Belarus (22% of its land area) and Austria (13%) were most affected by higher levels of contamination. Other countries were seriously affected; for example, more than 5% of Ukraine, Finland and Sweden were contaminated to high levels (> 40,000 Bq/m2 caesium-137). More than 80% of Moldova, the European part of Turkey, Slovenia, Switzerland, Austria and the Slovak Republic were contaminated to lower levels (> 4,000 Bq/m2 caesium-137). And 44% of Germany and 34% of the UK were similarly affected. (See map of radioactive distribution of caesium-137 in Europe)[55]

While the IAEA/WHO and UNSCEAR considered areas with exposure greater than 40,000 Bq/m2, the TORCH report also included areas contaminated with more than 4,000 Bq/m2 of Cs-137.

The TORCH 2006 report "estimated that more than half the iodine-131 from Chernobyl [which increases the risk of thyroid cancer] was deposited outside the former Soviet Union. Possible increases in thyroid cancer have been reported in the Czech Republic and the UK, but more research is needed to evaluate thyroid cancer incidences in Western Europe". It predicted about 30,000 to 60,000 excess cancer deaths, 7 to 15 Times greater than the figure of 4,000 in the IAEA press release; warned that predictions of excess cancer deaths strongly depend on the risk factor used; and predicted excess cases of thyroid cancer range between 18,000 and 66,000 in Belarus alone depending on the risk projection model.[96] Elevated incidence thyroid cancer is still seen among Ukrainians who were exposed to radioactivity due to Chernobyl accident during their childhood, but who were diagnosed the malignancy as adults.[97]

Another study claims possible heightened mortality in Sweden.[98]

Greenpeace quoted a 1998 WHO study, which counted 212 dead from only 72,000 liquidators. The environmental NGO estimated a total death toll of 93,000 but cite in their report that "The most recently published figures indicate that in Belarus, Russia and the Ukraine alone the disaster could have resulted in an estimated 200,000 additional deaths in the period between 1990 and 2004." In its report, Greenpeace suggested there will be 270,000 cases of cancer alone attributable to Chernobyl fallout, and that 93,000 of these will probably be fatal compare with the IAEA 2005 report which claimed that "99% of thyroid cancers wouldn't be lethal".[99]

In 2006, the Union Chernobyl, the main organization of liquidators, stated that 10% of the 600,000 liquidators were dead, and 165,000 disabled.[100]

An April 2006 report by the International Physicians for Prevention of Nuclear Warfare (IPPNW), entitled "Health Effects of Chernobyl - 20 years after the reactor catastrophe",[101] stated that more than 10,000 people are today affected by thyroid cancer and 50,000 cases are expected. In Europe, the IPPNW claims that 10,000 deformities have been observed in newborns because of Chernobyl's radioactive discharge, with 5,000 deaths among newborn children. They also state that several hundreds of thousands of the people who worked on the site after the disaster are now sick because of radiation, and tens of thousands are dead.[100]

Revisiting the issue for the 25th anniversary of the Chernobyl disaster, the Union of Concerned Scientists described the Forum's estimate of four thousand as pertaining only to "a much smaller subgroup of people who experienced the greatest exposure to released radiation". Their estimates for the broader population are 50,000 excess cancer cases resulting in 25,000 excess cancer deaths.[102]

Human health effects Studies[edit]

The majority of premature deaths caused by Chernobyl are expected to be the result of cancers and other diseases induced by radiation in the decades after the event.[citation needed] This will be the result of a large population exposed to relatively low doses of radiation increasing the risk of cancer across that population.[citation needed] Some studies have considered the entire population of Europe. Interpretations of the current health state of exposed populations vary. Therefore, estimates of the ultimate human impact of the disaster have relied on numerical models of the effects of radiation on health. The effects of low-level radiation on human health are not well understood, and so the models used, notably the linear no threshold model, are open to question.[103]

Given these factors, studies of Chernobyl's health effects have come up with different conclusions and are sometimes the subject of scientific and political controversy. The following section presents some of the major studies on this topic.

Official studies[edit]

Chernobyl Forum report[edit]

In September 2005, a draft summary report by the Chernobyl Forum, comprising a number of UN agencies including the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), other UN bodies and the Governments of Belarus, the Russian Federation and Ukraine, set the number of deaths due to the accident at about 50 (47 workers who died of acute radiation syndrome and 9 children who died from thyroid cancer),[104] and added that a "total of up to 4000 people could eventually die of radiation exposure from the Chernobyl nuclear power plant accident" (excess cancer deaths which might eventually happen among the 600,000 with the highest levels of exposure.[105]).

The full version of the WHO health effects report adopted by the UN, published in April 2006, included an added 5000 eventually possible fatalities from contaminated areas in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine and predicted that, in total, an upper limit of 9000 might eventually die from cancer among the 6.9 million most-exposed Soviet citizens.[106][failed verification] Some newspapers and antinuclear organizations claimed the paper was minimizing the consequences of the accident.[107]

2008 UNSCEAR report[edit]

The United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) produced a detailed report on the effects of Chernobyl for the General Assembly of the UN in 2011.[108] This report concluded that 134 staff and emergency workers developed acute radiation syndrome and of those 28 died of radiation exposure within three months. Many of the survivors developed skin conditions and radiation induced cataracts, and 19 had since died, but from conditions not necessarily associated with radiation exposure. Of the several hundred thousand liquidators, apart from some emerging indications of increased leukaemia, there was no other evidence of health effects.

In the general public in the affected areas, the only effect with 'persuasive evidence' was the fraction of the 6,000 cases of thyroid cancer in adolescents of whom by 2005 15 cases had proved fatal. There was no evidence of increased rates of solid cancers or leukaemia among the general population. However, there was psychological worry about the effects of radiation.

The total deaths reliably attributable by UNSCEAR to the radiation produced by the accident therefore was 62.

The report concluded that 'the vast majority of the population need not live in fear of serious health consequences from the Chernobyl accident'.[109]

Unofficial studies[edit]

TORCH report[edit]

In 2006 German Green Party Member of the European Parliament Rebecca Harms commissioned UK scientists Ian Fairlie and David Sumner for an alternate report (TORCH, The Other Report on CHernobyl) in response to the UN report. The report included areas not covered by the Chernobyl forum report, and also lower radiation doses. It predicted about 30,000 to 60,000 excess cancer deaths and warned that predictions of excess cancer deaths strongly depend on the risk factor used, and urged more research stating that large uncertainties made it difficult to properly assess the full scale of the disaster.[55]

In 2016, an updated TORCH report was written by Ian Fairlie with support of Friends of the Earth Austria.[110]

Greenpeace[edit]

Demonstration on Chernobyl day near WHO in Geneva

Greenpeace claimed contradictions in the Chernobyl Forum reports, quoting a 1998 WHO study referenced in the 2005 report, which projected 212 dead from 72,000 liquidators.[7] In its report, Greenpeace suggested there will be 270,000 cases of cancer attributable to Chernobyl fallout, and that 93,000 of these will probably be fatal, but state in their report that "The most recently published figures indicate that in Belarus, Russia and Ukraine alone the accident could have resulted in an estimated 200,000 additional deaths in the period between 1990 and 2004."[107][111]

Blake Lee-Harwood, campaigns director at Greenpeace, believes that cancer was likely to be the cause of less than half of the final fatalities and that "intestinal problems, heart and circulation problems, respiratory problems, endocrine problems, and particularly effects on the immune system," will also cause fatalities. However, concern has been expressed about the methods used in compiling the Greenpeace report.[107][112] It is not peer reviewed nor does it rely on peer review science as the Chernobyl Forum report did.

April 2006 IPPNW report[edit]

According to an April 2006 report by the German affiliate of the International Physicians for Prevention of Nuclear Warfare (IPPNW), entitled "Health Effects of Chernobyl", more than 10,000 people are today affected by thyroid cancer and 50,000 cases are expected. The report projected tens of thousands dead among the liquidators. In Europe, it alleges that 10,000 deformities have been observed in newborns because of Chernobyl's radioactive discharge, with 5000 deaths among newborn children. They also claimed that several hundreds of thousands of the people who worked on the site after the accident are now sick because of radiation, and tens of thousands are dead.[113]

Yablokov/Nesterenko publication[edit]

Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment is an English translation of the 2007 Russian publication Chernobyl by Alexey Yablokov, Vassily Nesterenko and Alexey Nesterenko. It was published online in 2009 by the New York Academy of Sciences in their Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. The New York Academy of Sciences included a disclaimer to inform readers it did not commission, endorse or peer review the work.

"In no sense did Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences or the New York Academy of Sciences commission this work; nor by its publication does the Academy validate the claims made in the original Slavic language publications cited in the translated papers. Importantly, the translated volume has not been formally peer‐reviewed by the New York Academy of Sciences or by anyone else."[114]

The report presents an analysis of scientific literature and concludes that medical records between 1986, the year of the accident, and 2004 reflect 985,000 deaths as a result of the radioactivity released. The authors suggest that most of the deaths were in Russia, Belarus and Ukraine, but others were spread through the many other countries the radiation from Chernobyl struck.[115] The literature analysis draws on over 1,000 published titles and over 5,000 internet and printed publications discussing the consequences of the Chernobyl disaster. The authors contend that those publications and papers were written by Eastern European authorities and have been downplayed or ignored by the IAEA and UNSCEAR.[116] Author Alexy V. Yablokov was also one of the general editors on the Greenpeace commissioned report also criticizing the Chernobyl Forum findings published one year prior to the Russian-language version of this report.

A critical review by Dr. Monty Charles in the journal Radiation Protection Dosimetry states that Consequences is a direct extension of the 2005 Greenpeace report, updated with data of unknown quality.[117] The New York Academy of Sciences also published a severely critical review by M. I. Balonov from the Institute of Radiation Hygiene (St. Petersburg, Russia) which stated that "The value of [Consequences] is not zero, but negative, as its bias is obvious only to specialists, while inexperienced readers may well be put into deep error."[118] Several other critical responses have also been published.[114]

In 2016, 187 local Ukrainians had returned and were living permanently in the zone.[66]

Higher than statistically normal appearances of defects[edit]

The American Academy of Pediatrics published a study state that the overall rate of neural tube defects in the Rivne region of Ukraine is one of the highest in Europe (22 per 10,000 live births). The rate in Polissia (Ukraine) is 27.0 per 10,000. The study suggested that rates of microcephaly and microphthalmia may also be higher than normal.[119][120]

Other studies and claims[edit]

  • The claim is made, by Collette Thomas, writing on 24 April 2006, that someone in the Ukrainian Health Ministry claimed in 2006 that more than 2.4 million Ukrainians, including 428,000 children, have health problems related to the catastrophe.[14] The claim appears to have been invented by her through interpretation of a webpage of the Kyiv Regional Administration.[121] Psychological after-effects, as the 2006 UN report pointed out, have also had adverse effects on internally displaced persons.
  • In a recently published study scientists from Forschungszentrum Jülich, Germany, published the "Korma-Report" with data of radiological long-term measurements that were performed between 1998 and 2007 in a region in Belarus that was affected by the Chernobyl accident. The internal radiation exposure of the inhabitants in a village in Korma County/Belarus caused by the existing radioactive contamination has experienced a decrease from a very high level. The external exposure, however, reveals a different picture. Although an overall decrease was observed, the organic constituents of the soil show an increase in contamination, not observed in soils from cultivated land or gardens. According to the Korma Report the internal dose will decrease to less than 0.2 mSv/a in 2011 and to below 0.1 mSv/a in 2020. Despite this, the cumulative dose will remain higher than "normal" due to external exposure. Resettlement may even be possible in former prohibited areas provided that people comply with appropriate dietary rules.[122]
  • Study of heightened mortality in Sweden.[98][123] But it must be pointed out that this study, and in particular the conclusions drawn has been very criticized.[124]
  • One study reports increased levels of birth defects in Germany and Finland in the wake of the accident.[125]
  • A change in the human sex ratio at birth from 1987 onward in several European countries has been linked to Chernobyl fallout.[126][127]
  • In the Czech Republic, thyroid cancer has increased significantly after Chernobyl.[128]
  • The Abstract of the April 2006 International Agency for Research on Cancer report Estimates of the cancer burden in Europe from radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident stated "It is unlikely that the cancer burden from the largest radiological accident to date could be detected by monitoring national cancer statistics. Indeed, results of analyses of time trends in cancer incidence and mortality in Europe do not, at present, indicate any increase in cancer rates – other than of thyroid cancer in the most contaminated regions – that can be clearly attributed to radiation from the Chernobyl accident."[129][130] They estimate, based on the linear no threshold model of cancer effects, that 16,000 excess cancer deaths could be expected from the effects of the Chernobyl accident up to 2065. Their estimates have very wide 95% confidence intervals from 6,700 deaths to 38,000.[131]
  • The application of the linear no threshold model to predict deaths from low levels of exposure to radiation was disputed in a BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation) Horizon documentary, broadcast on 13 July 2006.[132] It offered statistical evidence to suggest that there is an exposure threshold of about 200 millisieverts, below which there is no increase in radiation-induced disease. Indeed, it went further, reporting research from Professor Ron Chesser of Texas Tech University, which suggests that low exposures to radiation can have a protective effect. The program interviewed scientists who believe that the increase in thyroid cancer in the immediate area of the explosion had been over-recorded, and predicted that the estimates for widespread deaths in the long term would be proved wrong. It noted the view of the World Health Organization scientist Dr Mike Rapacholi that, while most cancers can take decades to manifest, leukemia manifests within a decade or so: none of the previously expected peak of leukemia deaths has been found, and none is now expected. Identifying the need to balance the "fear response" in the public's reaction to radiation, the program quoted Dr Peter Boyle, director of the IARC: "Tobacco smoking will cause several thousand times more cancers in the [European] population."[133]
  • An article in Der Spiegel in April 2016 also cast doubt on the use of the linear no threshold model to predict cancer rates from Chernobyl.[103] The article claimed that the threshold for radiation damage was over 100 millisieverts and reported initial results of large-scale trials in Germany by the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research and three other German institutes in 2016 showing beneficial results of decreasing inflammation and strengthening bones from lower radiation doses.
  • Professor Wade Allison of Oxford University (a lecturer in medical physics and particle physics) gave a talk on ionising radiation 24 November 2006 in which he gave an approximate figure of 81 cancer deaths from Chernobyl (excluding 28 cases from acute radiation exposure and the thyroid cancer deaths which he regards as "avoidable"). In a closely reasoned argument using statistics from therapeutic radiation, exposure to elevated natural radiation (the presence of radon gas in homes) and the diseases of Hiroshima and Nagasaki survivors he demonstrated that the linear no-threshold model should not be applied to low-level exposure in humans, as it ignores the well-known natural repair mechanisms of the body.[134][135]
  • A photographic essay by photojournalist Paul Fusco documents problems in the children in the Chernobyl region. No evidence is offered to suggest these problems are in any way related to the nuclear incident[136][137]
  • The work of photojournalist Michael Forster Rothbart documents the human impact of the disaster on residents who stayed in the affected area.[138]
  • Bandashevsky measured levels of radioisotopes in children who had died in the Minsk area that had received Chernobyl fallout, and the cardiac findings were the same as those seen in test animals that had been administered Cs-137.[139]

French legal action[edit]

Since March 2001, 400 lawsuits have been filed in France against "X" (the French equivalent of John Doe, an unknown person or company) by the French Association of Thyroid-affected People, including 200 in April 2006. These persons are affected by thyroid cancer or goitres, and have filed lawsuits alleging that the French government, at the time led by Prime Minister Jacques Chirac, had not adequately informed the population of the risks linked to the Chernobyl radioactive fallout. The complaint contrasts the health protection measures put in place in nearby countries, warning against consumption of green vegetables or milk by children and pregnant women, with the relatively high contamination suffered by the east of France and Corsica. Although the 2006 study by the French Institute of Radioprotection and Nuclear Safety said that no clear link could be found between Chernobyl and the increase of thyroid cancers in France, it also stated that papillary thyroid cancer had tripled in the following years.[140]

International response[edit]

Chernobyl fallout in Scandinavia

After the Chernobyl Disaster, a number of countries were reluctant to expand their nuclear programs. Italy and Switzerland tried to ban nuclear power altogether. Other countries, such as the Netherlands and Finland postponed the addition of nuclear power plants. The disaster reaffirmed policy made by Austria and Sweden to terminate use of all nuclear energy. Germany set up regulatory organizations and new policy including the Federal Ministry of Environment and Reactor Safety and a new act for precaution protection against nuclear radiation.[141]

Policy levers were not only implemented on a national level, but on an international level as well. In June 1986, the European Community implemented new standards for cesium. They attempted to do the same for iodine, but could not reach an agreement.[141] Several international programs were formed, including the World Association of Nuclear Operators. This association essentially linked 130 operators in 30 countries. Nuclear engineers would visit nuclear plants worldwide to learn and work towards better safety precautions.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), established in 1957, created the Nuclear Safety Assistance Coordination Centre, which serves as an example of the international, multilateral cooperation resulting from the disaster (World Nuclear, 2016). They created the Convention on Early Notification of a Nuclear Accident and Convention on Assistance in the Case of a Nuclear Accident or Radiological Emergency. Nations called for a more comprehensive set of obligatory regulations for nuclear power plants from safe management of installation to safe management of radioactive waste. They created the Joint Convention of Safety of Spent Fuel Management in which obliged nations to create proper policy to control nuclear power plant management.[142]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Chernobyl disaster" (PDF). April 2009. Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 January 2020.
  2. ^ "UNSCEAR 2008 Report to the General Assembly, Annex D" (PDF). United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation. 2008.
  3. ^ "Assessing the Chernobyl Consequences". International Atomic Energy Agency. Archived from the original on 30 August 2013.
  4. ^ Mück, Konrad; Pröhl, Gerhard; Likhtarev, Ilya; Kovgan, Lina; Golikov, Vladislav; Zeger, Johann (2002). "Reconstruction of the Inhalation Dose in the 30-Km Zone After the Chernobyl Accident". Health Physics. 82 (2): 157–72. doi:10.1097/00004032-200202000-00003. PMID 11797891. S2CID 31580079.
  5. ^ Pröhl, Gerhard; Mück, Konrad; Likhtarev, Ilya; Kovgan, Lina; Golikov, Vladislav (2002). "Reconstruction of the Ingestion Doses Received by the Population Evacuated from the Settlements in the 30-Km Zone Around the Chernobyl Reactor". Health Physics. 82 (2): 173–81. doi:10.1097/00004032-200202000-00004. PMID 11797892. S2CID 44929090.
  6. ^ Demidchik, Y. E.; Saenko, V. A.; Yamashita, S. (2007). "Childhood thyroid cancer in Belarus, Russia, and Ukraine after Chernobyl and at present". Arquivos Brasileiros de Endocrinologia & Metabologia. 51 (5): 748–762. doi:10.1590/s0004-27302007000500012. PMID 17891238.
  7. ^ a b c Bennett, Burton; Repacholi, Michael; Carr, Zhanat, eds. (2006). Health Effects of the Chernobyl Accident and Special Health Care Programmes: report of the UN Chernobyl Forum Expert Group "Health" (PDF). Geneva: WHO. ISBN 978-92-4-159417-2. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  8. ^ Ostroumova, E.; Rozhko, A.; Hatch, M.; Furukawa, K.; Polyanskaya, O.; McConnell, R. J.; Drozdovitch, V. (2013). "Measures of thyroid function among Belarusian children and adolescents exposed to iodine-131 from the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear plant". Environmental Health Perspectives. 121 (7): 865–871. doi:10.1289/ehp.1205783. PMC 3701991. PMID 23651658.
  9. ^ Zablotska, L. B.; Nadyrov, E. A.; Polyanskaya, O. N.; McConnell, R. J.; O'Kane, P.; Lubin, J.; Yauseyenka, V. V. (2015). "Risk of thyroid follicular adenoma among children and adolescents in Belarus exposed to iodine-131 after the Chornobyl accident". American Journal of Epidemiology. 182 (9): 781–790. doi:10.1093/aje/kwv127. PMC 4751233. PMID 26443421.
  10. ^ a b National Research Council Staff, Institute of Medicine Staff, National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on Exposure of the American People to I-131 from the Nevada Atomic Bomb Tests, & Institute of Medicine (U.S.). Committee on Thyroid Screening Related to I-131 Exposure. (1999).
  11. ^ Drozdovitch, V.; Minenko, V.; Khrouch, V.; Leshcheva, S.; Gavrilin, Y.; Khrutchinsky, A.; Bouville (2013). "Thyroid dose estimates for a cohort of belarusian children exposed to radiation from the chernobyl accident". Radiation Research. 179 (5): 597–609. Bibcode:2013RadR..179..597D. doi:10.1667/rr3153.1. PMC 3682838. PMID 23560632.
  12. ^ a b Cardis, E.; Hatch, M. (May 2011). "The Chernobyl accident – an epidemiological perspective". Clinical Oncology. 23 (4): 251–260. doi:10.1016/j.clon.2011.01.510. PMC 3107017. PMID 21396807.
  13. ^ Williams, D (December 2008). "Twenty years' experience with post-Chernobyl thyroid cancer". Best Practice & Research Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 22 (6): 1061–1073. doi:10.1016/j.beem.2008.09.020. PMID 19041832.
  14. ^ a b "Tchernobyl, 20 ans après" (in French). RFI. 24 April 2006. Archived from the original on 30 April 2006. Retrieved 24 April 2006.
  15. ^ "Chernobyl: country by country A - H". Davistown Museum, Maine, USA. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  16. ^ (in French) Map of radioactive cloud with flash animation, French IRSN (Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire — Institute of Radioprotection and Nuclear Safety) "Accident de Tchernobyl: déplacement du nuage radioactif au dessus de l'Europe entre le 26 avril et le 10 mai 1986". IRSN. Retrieved 8 October 2015.
  17. ^ Jensen, Mikael; Lindhé, John-Christer (Autumn 1986). "International Reports – Sweden: Monitoring the Fallout" (PDF). IAEA Bulletin.
  18. ^ Chapter IV: Dose estimates, Nuclear Energy Agency, 2002
  19. ^ IAEA, International Atomic Energy Agency (2005). "Frequently Asked Chernobyl Questions". International Atomic Energy Agency. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  20. ^ Weinberg, H. S.; Korol, A. B.; Kirzhner, V. M.; Avivi, A.; Fahima, T.; Nevo, E.; Shapiro, S.; Rennert, G.; Piatak, O.; Stepanova, E. I.; Skvarskaja, E. (2001). "Very high mutation rate in offspring of Chernobyl accident liquidators". Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 268 (1471): 1001–5. doi:10.1098/rspb.2001.1650. PMC 1088700. PMID 11375082.
  21. ^ Furitsu, Katsumi; Ryo, Haruko; Yeliseeva, Klaudiya G.; Thuy, Le Thi Thanh; Kawabata, Hiroaki; Krupnova, Evelina V.; Trusova, Valentina D.; Rzheutsky, Valery A.; Nakajima, Hiroo; Kartel, Nikolai; Nomura, Taisei (2005). "Microsatellite mutations show no increases in the children of the Chernobyl liquidators". Mutation Research/Genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis. 581 (1–2): 69–82. doi:10.1016/j.mrgentox.2004.11.002. PMID 15725606.
  22. ^ International Chernobyl Project Archived 29 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Ns.iaea.org. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  23. ^ I-131 Exposure, Institute of Medicine (US) Committee on Thyroid Screening Related to; Tests, National Research Council (US) Committee on Exposure of the American People to I.-131 from the Nevada Atomic Bomb (1999). Health Risks of I-131 Exposure. National Academies Press (US).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ "Study of Thyroid Cancer and Other Thyroid Diseases Following the Chernobyl Accident (Ukraine)". 9 December 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  25. ^ Frequently Asked Chernobyl Questions Archived 23 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Iaea.org. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  26. ^ Reiners, Christoph; Biko, Johannes; Haenscheid, Heribert; Hebestreit, Helge; Kirinjuk, Stalina; Baranowski, Oleg; Marlowe, Robert J.; Demidchik, Ewgeni; Drozd, Valentina; Demidchik, Yuri (1 July 2013). "Twenty-Five Years After Chernobyl: Outcome of Radioiodine Treatment in Children and Adolescents With Very High-Risk Radiation-Induced Differentiated Thyroid Carcinoma". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism. 98 (7): 3039–3048. doi:10.1210/jc.2013-1059. ISSN 0021-972X. PMID 23616148.
  27. ^ Popoveniuc, Geanina; Jonklaas, Jacqueline (1 March 2012). "Thyroid Nodules". Medical Clinics of North America. Thyroid Disorders and Diseases. 96 (2): 329–349. doi:10.1016/j.mcna.2012.02.002. ISSN 0025-7125. PMC 3575959. PMID 22443979.
  28. ^ Dancause, Kelsey Needham; Yevtushok, Lyubov; Lapchenko, Serhiy; Shumlyansky, Ihor; Shevchenko, Genadiy; Wertelecki, Wladimir; Garruto, Ralph M. (2010). "Chronic radiation exposure in the Rivne-Polissia region of Ukraine: Implications for birth defects". American Journal of Human Biology. 22 (5): 667–74. doi:10.1002/ajhb.21063. PMID 20737614. S2CID 19133768.
  29. ^ a b c Mycio, Mary (9 September 2005). Wormwood Forest: A Natural History of Chernobyl. Joseph Henry Press. ISBN 978-0-309-09430-6. Retrieved 25 September 2009. Wormwood Forest: A Natural History of Chernobyl.
  30. ^ "Chernobyl - its impact on Sweden" (PDF). SSI-rapport 86-12. 1 August 1986. ISSN 0282-4434. Archived (PDF) from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  31. ^ Moeller, A. P.; Mousseau, T. A. (2009). "Reduced abundance of insects and spiders linked to radiation at Chernobyl 20 years after the accident". Biology Letters. 5 (3): 356–9. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2008.0778. PMC 2679916. PMID 19324644.
  32. ^ Gastberger, Michael; Steinhäusler, Friedrich; Gerzabek, Martin H; Lettner, Herbert; Hubmer, Alexander (1 June 2000). "Soil-to-plant transfer of fallout caesium and strontium in Austrian lowland and Alpine pastures". Journal of Environmental Radioactivity. 49 (2): 217–233. doi:10.1016/S0265-931X(99)00106-X. ISSN 0265-931X.
  33. ^ Poiarkov, V.A.; Nazarov, A.N.; Kaletnik, N.N. (1995). "Post-Chernobyl radiomonitoring of Ukrainian forest ecosystems". Journal of Environmental Radioactivity. 26 (3): 259–271. doi:10.1016/0265-931X(94)00039-Y.
  34. ^ Gudkov, DI; Kuz'Menko, MI; Kireev, SI; Nazarov, AB; Shevtsova, NL; Dziubenko, EV; Kaglian, AE (2009). "Radioecological problems of aquatic ecosystems of the Chernobyl exclusion zone". Radiatsionnaia Biologiia, Radioecologiia. 49 (2): 192–202. PMID 19507688.
  35. ^ a b Voors, P.I.; Van Weers, A.W. (1991). "Transfer of Chernobyl radiocaesium (134Cs and 137Cs) from grass silage to milk in dairy cows". Journal of Environmental Radioactivity. 13 (2): 125–40. doi:10.1016/0265-931X(91)90055-K.
  36. ^ Moseman, Andrew (20 August 2010). "24 Years After Chernobyl, Radioactive Boars Still Roam Germany". Discover Magazine. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  37. ^ "Post-Chernobyl disaster sheep controls lifted on last UK farms". BBC. 1 June 2012. Retrieved 7 June 2012.
  38. ^ a b c d Zimmer, Katarina (7 February 2022). "Scientists can't agree about Chernobyl's impact on wildlife". Knowable Magazine. doi:10.1146/knowable-020422-1. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  39. ^ Baker, Robert J.; Chesser, Ronald K. (2000). "Letter to the Editor: The Chernobyl nuclear disaster and subsequent creation of a wildlife preserve". Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry. 19 (5): 1231–1232. doi:10.1002/etc.5620190501. S2CID 17795690. Archived from the original on 5 October 2003. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  40. ^ Little, J. (1993). "The Chernobyl accident, congenital anomalies and other reproductive outcomes". Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology. 7 (2): 121–51. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3016.1993.tb00388.x. PMID 8516187.
  41. ^ a b c Teratogen Update: Radiation and Chernobyl, Frank P. Castronovo Jr.TERATOLOGY 60:100–106 (1999)
  42. ^ Sperling, Karl; Neitzel, Heidemarie; Scherb, Hagen (2012). "Evidence for an increase in trisomy 21 (Down syndrome) in Europe after the Chernobyl reactor accident". Genetic Epidemiology. 36 (1): 48–55. doi:10.1002/gepi.20662. PMID 22162022. S2CID 22360867.
  43. ^ "WHO | Chernobyl: the true scale of the accident". WHO. Retrieved 16 April 2020.
  44. ^ UNSCEAR (United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation). "Annex D: Health effects due to radiation from the Chernobyl accident" (PDF). UNSCEAR 2008 Report to the General Assembly with Scientific Annexes. UNSCEAR. Retrieved 5 April 2011.
  45. ^ Brown, Valerie J. (2011). "Thyroid Cancer after Chornobyl: Increased Risk Persists Two Decades after Radioiodine Exposure". Environmental Health Perspectives. 119 (7): a306. doi:10.1289/ehp.119-a306a. PMC 3222980. PMID 21719382.
  46. ^ Bogdanova, Tetyana I.; Zurnadzhy, Ludmyla Y.; Greenebaum, Ellen; McConnell, Robert J.; Robbins, Jacob; Epstein, Ovsiy V.; Olijnyk, Valery A.; Hatch, Maureen; Zablotska, Lydia B.; Tronko, Mykola D. (2006). "A cohort study of thyroid cancer and other thyroid diseases after the Chornobyl accident". Cancer. 107 (11): 2559–66. doi:10.1002/cncr.22321. PMC 2983485. PMID 17083123.
  47. ^ Bromet, Havenaar, Guey. (2011). "A 25 year retrospective review of the psychological consequences of the chernobyl accident" (PDF). Clinical Oncology. 23 (4): 297–305. doi:10.1016/j.clon.2011.01.501. PMID 21330117. Departments of Psychiatry and Preventive Medicine, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York, USA.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  48. ^ - Venturi S. Correlation between radioactive cesium and the increase of pancreatic cancer: A Hypothesis. Biosfera 2020; 12(4):81-90.
  49. ^ Microsoft Word - !!MASTERDOC cesium dr3 mar2 ac.doc. (PDF). Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  50. ^ Bostick, Benjamin C.; Vairavamurthy, Murthy A.; Karthikeyan, K. G.; Chorover, Jon (2002). "Cesium Adsorption on Clay - Minerals: An EXAFS Spectroscopic Investigation" (PDF). Environmental Science and Technology. 36 (12): 2670–2676. Bibcode:2002EnST...36.2670B. doi:10.1021/es0156892. PMID 12099463. Retrieved 4 January 2019.
  51. ^ Information Bridge: DOE Scientific and Technical Information - Sponsored by OSTI. Osti.gov. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  52. ^ Venturi, Sebastiano (January 2021). "Cesium in Biology, Pancreatic Cancer, and Controversy in High and Low Radiation Exposure Damage—Scientific, Environmental, Geopolitical, and Economic Aspects". International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 18 (17): 8934. doi:10.3390/ijerph18178934. PMC 8431133. PMID 34501532. Text was copied from this source, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
  53. ^ Grimm, E., & University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, degree granting institution. (2015). Thyroid nodules as related to absorbed dose from iodine-131 in a Ukrainian cohort following the Chernobyl accident.
  54. ^ Thomas, Bethel; Galpine, Mathieson; Krznaric; Unger (2011). "Integrating Research on Thyroid Cancer after Chernobyl — The Chernobyl Tissue Bank". Clinical Oncology. 23 (4): 276–281. doi:10.1016/j.clon.2011.01.503. PMC 3391565. PMID 21345659.
  55. ^ a b c d Fairlie, Ian; Sumner, David (2006). "The Other Report on Chernobyl (TORCH)" (PDF). Greens/EFA Party in the European Parliament and the Altner-Combecher Foundation. Berlin, Brussels, Kiev. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  56. ^ "Post-Chernobyl Monitoring and Controls Survey Report" (PDF). UK Food Standards Agency. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 September 2008. Retrieved 19 April 2006.
  57. ^ MacAlister, Terry (12 May 2009). "Britain's farmers still restricted by Chernobyl nuclear fallout". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
  58. ^ "Post-Chernobyl disaster sheep controls lifted on last UK farms". BBC News Cumbria. 1 June 2012. Retrieved 20 March 2015.
  59. ^ Strand, P; Selnaes, TD; Bøe, E; Harbitz, O; Andersson-Sørlie, A (1992). "Chernobyl fallout: Internal doses to the Norwegian population and the effect of dietary advice". Health Physics. 63 (4): 385–92. doi:10.1097/00004032-199210000-00001. PMID 1526778.
  60. ^ Zoriy, Pedro; Dederichs, Herbert; Pillath, Jürgen; Heuel-Fabianek, Burkhard; Hill, Peter; Lennartz, Reinhard (2016). "Long-term monitoring of radiation exposure of the population in radioactively contaminated areas of Belarus - Korma Study - The Korma Report II (1998-2015)". Schriften des Forschungszentrums Jülich: Reihe Energie & Umwelt / Energy & Environment. Forschungszentrum Jülich, Zentralbibliothek, Verlag. Retrieved 21 December 2016.[permanent dead link]
  61. ^ Yeager, Meredith; Machiela, Mitchell J.; Kothiyal, Prachi; Dean, Michael; Bodelon, Clara; Suman, Shalabh; Wang, Mingyi; Mirabello, Lisa; Nelson, Chase W.; Zhou, Weiyin; Palmer, Cameron (14 May 2021). "Lack of transgenerational effects of ionizing radiation exposure from the Chernobyl accident". Science. 372 (6543): 725–729. Bibcode:2021Sci...372..725Y. doi:10.1126/science.abg2365. ISSN 0036-8075. PMC 9398532. PMID 33888597. S2CID 233371673.
  62. ^ a b c Mousseau, Timothy A. (3 November 2021). "The Biology of Chernobyl". Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics. 52 (1): 87–109. doi:10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-110218-024827. ISSN 1543-592X. S2CID 238723709. Retrieved 17 February 2022. Table 1
  63. ^ Energy Citations Database (ECD) - - Document #5012309. Osti.gov. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  64. ^ Mulvey, Stephen (4 April 2006). "Chernobyl diary - Part One". BBC News. Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  65. ^ Wood, Mike; Beresford, Nick (2016). "The wildlife of Chernobyl: 30 years without man". The Biologist. 63 (2): 16–19. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  66. ^ a b Oliphant, Roland (24 April 2016). "30 years after Chernobyl disaster, wildlife is flourishing in radioactive wasteland". The Telegraph. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  67. ^ Deryabina, T. G.; et al. (5 October 2015). "Long-term census data reveal abundant wildlife populations at Chernobyl". Current Biology. 25 (19): R824–R826. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2015.08.017. PMID 26439334.
  68. ^ "What happened to wildlife when Chernobyl drove humans out? It thrived". The Guardian. 5 October 2015. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
  69. ^ Deryabina, TG; Kuchmel, SV; Nagorskaya, LL; Hinton, TG; Beasley, JC; Lerebours, A; Smith, JT (2015). "Long-term census data reveal abundant wildlife populations at Chernobyl". Current Biology. 25 (19): R824–R826. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2015.08.017. PMID 26439334.
  70. ^ Orizaola, Germán (15 May 2019). "How Chernobyl became a wildlife refuge". City Monitor. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  71. ^ "How Chernobyl has become an unexpected haven for wildlife". United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP). 16 September 2020. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  72. ^ a b Birch, Douglas (7 June 2007). "Chernobyl Area Becomes Wildlife Haven". The Washington Post. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  73. ^ a b Gill, Victoria (30 July 2010). "Chernobyl zone shows decline in biodiversity". BBC News. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  74. ^ Statement of the third meeting of the Chernobyl Forum held 18–20 April 2005 at the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Headquarters, Vienna (PDF). Vienna, Austria: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). 2005. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  75. ^ Moller, A; Mousseau, T (2006). "Biological consequences of Chernobyl: 20 years on". Trends in Ecology & Evolution. 21 (4): 200–7. doi:10.1016/j.tree.2006.01.008. PMID 16701086.
  76. ^ a b Ravilious, Kate (29 June 2009). "Despite Mutations, Chernobyl Wildlife Is Thriving". National Geographic Magazine. ISSN 0027-9358. Archived from the original on 27 June 2006. Retrieved 23 September 2009.
  77. ^ Moller, A. P.; Mousseau, T. A.; Milinevsky, G.; Peklo, A.; Pysanets, E.; Szep, T. (2005). "Condition, reproduction and survival of barn swallows from Chernobyl". Journal of Animal Ecology. 74 (6): 1102–1111. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2656.2005.01009.x.
  78. ^ Møller, A.P; Mousseau, T.A; de Lope, F; Saino, N (22 August 2007). "Elevated frequency of abnormalities in barn swallows from Chernobyl". Biology Letters. 3 (4): 414–417. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0136. ISSN 1744-9561. PMC 1994720. PMID 17439847.
  79. ^ Fountain, Henry (28 August 2007). "Did Chernobyl Leave an Eden for Wildlife?". The New York Times. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  80. ^ Smith, J.T (23 February 2008). "Is Chernobyl radiation really causing negative individual and population-level effects on barn swallows?". Biology Letters. 4 (1): 63–64. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0430. PMC 2412919. PMID 18042513.
  81. ^ Moller, A.P; Mousseau, T.A; De Lope, F; Saino, N (2008). "Anecdotes and empirical research in Chernobyl". Biology Letters. 4 (1): 65–66. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0528. PMC 2412943.
  82. ^ Møller, Anders Pape; Bonisoli-Alquati, Andea; Rudolfsen, Geir; Mousseau, Timothy A. (2011). Brembs, Björn (ed.). "Chernobyl Birds Have Smaller Brains". PLOS ONE. 6 (2): e16862. Bibcode:2011PLoSO...616862M. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0016862. PMC 3033907. PMID 21390202.
  83. ^ a b c Kovalchuk, I.; Abramov, V; Pogribny, I; Kovalchuk, O (2004). "Molecular Aspects of Plant Adaptation to Life in the Chernobyl Zone". Plant Physiology. 135 (1): 357–63. doi:10.1104/pp.104.040477. PMC 429389. PMID 15133154.
  84. ^ Kovalchuk, Olga; Burke, Paula; Arkhipov, Andrey; Kuchma, Nikolaj; James, S.Jill; Kovalchuk, Igor; Pogribny, Igor (2003). "Genome hypermethylation in Pinus silvestris of Chernobyl—a mechanism for radiation adaptation?". Mutation Research/Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis. 529 (1–2): 13–20. doi:10.1016/S0027-5107(03)00103-9. PMID 12943916.
  85. ^ Danchenko, Maksym; Skultety, Ludovit; Rashydov, Namik M.; Berezhna, Valentyna V.; Mátel, L'Ubomír; Salaj, Terézia; Pret'Ová, Anna; Hajduch, Martin (2009). "Proteomic Analysis of Mature Soybean Seeds from the Chernobyl Area Suggests Plant Adaptation to the Contaminated Environment". Journal of Proteome Research. 8 (6): 2915–22. doi:10.1021/pr900034u. PMID 19320472.
  86. ^ Boubriak, I. I.; Grodzinsky, D. M.; Polischuk, V. P.; Naumenko, V. D.; Gushcha, N. P.; Micheev, A. N.; McCready, S. J.; Osborne, D. J. (2007). "Adaptation and Impairment of DNA Repair Function in Pollen of Betula verrucosa and Seeds of Oenothera biennis from Differently Radionuclide-contaminated Sites of Chernobyl". Annals of Botany. 101 (2): 267–76. doi:10.1093/aob/mcm276. PMC 2711018. PMID 17981881.
  87. ^ Galván, Ismael; Bonisoli-Alquati, Andrea; Jenkinson, Shanna; Ghanem, Ghanem; Wakamatsu, Kazumasa; Mousseau, Timothy A.; Møller, Anders P. (1 December 2014). "Chronic exposure to low-dose radiation at Chernobyl favours adaptation to oxidative stress in birds". Functional Ecology. 28 (6): 1387–1403. doi:10.1111/1365-2435.12283. hdl:10261/108218. ISSN 1365-2435. S2CID 1869348.
  88. ^ Parker, Will (23 May 2007). "Chernobyl Fungus Feeds On Radiation". SCI GOGO. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
  89. ^ Dadachova E, Bryan RA, Huang X, Moadel T, Schweitzer AD, Aisen P, Nosanchuk JD, Casadevall A (23 May 2007). "Ionizing Radiation Changes the Electronic Properties of Melanin and Enhances the Growth of Melanized Fungi". PLOS ONE. 2 (5): e457. Bibcode:2007PLoSO...2..457D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0000457. PMC 1866175. PMID 17520016.
  90. ^ Vember, VV; Zhdanova, NN (2001). "Peculiarities of linear growth of the melanin-containing fungi Cladosporium sphaerospermum Penz. And Alternaria alternata (Fr.) Keissler". Mikrobiolohichnyi Zhurnal. 63 (3): 3–12. PMID 11785260.
  91. ^ World Health Organisation "World Health Organization report explains the health impacts of the world's worst-ever civil nuclear accident", WHO, 26 April 2006. Retrieved 4 April 2011.
  92. ^ "'Too little known on Chernobyl'". BBC News. 19 April 2006. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  93. ^ "IAEA Report". In Focus: Chernobyl. Retrieved 29 March 2006.
  94. ^ "Chernobyl: the true scale of the accident". World Health Organization. 5 September 2005. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  95. ^ Peplow, M (19 April 2006). "Special Report: Counting the dead". Nature. 440 (7087): 982–983. Bibcode:2006Natur.440..982.. doi:10.1038/440982a. PMID 16625167.
  96. ^ TORCH report executive summary, op.cit., p.4
  97. ^ Dinets, A.; Hulchiy, M.; Sofiadis, A.; Ghaderi, M.; Höög, A.; Larsson, C.; Zedenius, J. (2012). "Clinical, genetic, and immunohistochemical characterization of 70 Ukrainian adult cases with post-Chornobyl papillary thyroid carcinoma". European Journal of Endocrinology. 166 (6): 1049–60. doi:10.1530/EJE-12-0144. PMC 3361791. PMID 22457234.
  98. ^ a b Chernobyl 'caused Sweden cancers', BBC News, 20 November 2004
  99. ^ "Greenpeace rejects Chernobyl toll". BBC News. 18 April 2006.
  100. ^ a b "Selon un rapport indépendant, les chiffres de l'ONU sur les victimes de Tchernobyl ont été sous-estimés (According to an independent report, UN numbers on Chernobyl's victims has been underestimated)". Le Monde (in French). 7 April 2006. Archived from the original on 6 September 2012. Retrieved 20 April 2006. and see also "'On n'a pas fini d'entendre parler de Tchernobyl', interview with Angelika Claussen, head of the German section of the IPPNW". Arte. 13 April 2006.[permanent dead link]
  101. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). www.ippnw-students.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 15 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  102. ^ Chernobyl Cancer Death Toll Estimate More Than Six Times Higher Than the 4,000 Frequently Cited, According to a New UCS Analysis Archived 2 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Ucsusa.org. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  103. ^ a b Dworschak, Manfred (26 April 2016). "The Chernobyl Conundrum: Is Radiation As Bad As We Thought?". Spiegel Online International. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  104. ^ "IAEA Report". In Focus: Chernobyl. Archived from the original on 27 March 2006. Retrieved 29 March 2006.
  105. ^ For full coverage see the IAEA Focus Page (op.cit.) and joint IAEA/WHO/UNDP 5 September 2005 press release Chernobyl: The True Scale of the Accident Archived 10 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  106. ^ Peplow, M (2006). "Special Report: Counting the dead". Nature. 440 (7087): 982–3. Bibcode:2006Natur.440..982.. doi:10.1038/440982a. PMID 16625167.
  107. ^ a b c "Spiegel, The Chernobyl body count controversy". In Focus: Chernobyl. Retrieved 25 August 2006.
  108. ^ Sources and Effects of Ionizing Radiation; 2008 Report to the General Assembly; (PDF). Vol. II. New York, USA: United Nations Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation. 2011. pp. 1–219. ISBN 978-92-1-142280-1. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  109. ^ "The Chernobyl accident: UNSCEAR's assessments of the radiation effects". United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation. 16 July 2012. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  110. ^ Fairlie, Ian (31 March 2016). TORCH-2016: An independent scientific evaluation of the health-related effects of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster. Version 1.1 (PDF). Friends of the Earth Austria.
  111. ^ Bialik, Carl (27 April 2006). "Measuring Chernobyl's Fallout". The Numbers Guy, The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 5 May 2014.[permanent dead link]
  112. ^ Bialik, Carl (27 April 2006). "Measuring Chernobyl's Fallout". The Numbers Guy, The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 5 May 2014.[permanent dead link]
  113. ^ "20 years after Chernobyl – The ongoing health effects". IPPNW. April 2006. Archived from the original on 29 June 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2006.
  114. ^ a b New York Academy of Sciences. "Chernobyl". Archived from the original on 24 March 2019.
  115. ^ Alexey V. Yablokov; Vassily B. Nesterenko; Alexey V. Nesterenko (2009). Chernobyl: Consequences of the Catastrophe for People and the Environment (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences) (paperback ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-57331-757-3.
  116. ^ "Details". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 15 March 2011.
  117. ^ Charles, Monty (2010). "Chernobyl: consequences of the catastrophe for people and the environment (2010)" (PDF). Radiation Protection Dosimetry. 141 (1): 101–104. doi:10.1093/rpd/ncq185. PMC 2974725. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2012. "During the production of the reports from the Chernobyl Forum and Greenpeace, a vast body of previously unknown data began to emerge in the form of publications, reports, theses, etc. from Belarus, Ukraine and Russia, much of it in Slavic languages. Little of these data appears to have been incorporated into the international literature. The quality of these publications and whether they would sustain critical peer-review in the western scientific literature is unknown. The book by Yablokov et al. is part of an attempt to summarise these new findings and include them to extend the findings of the Greenpeace report."
  118. ^ M. I. Balonov (28 April 2010). "Review of Volume 1181". New York Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 15 September 2011.
  119. ^ Norton, Amy (24 March 2010). "Higher birth-defect rate seen in Chernobyl area". Reuters Health. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  120. ^ Wertelecki, Wladimir (1 April 2010). "Malformations in a Chornobyl-Impacted Region". Pediatrics. 125 (4): e836–e843. doi:10.1542/peds.2009-2219. ISSN 0031-4005. PMID 20308207. S2CID 2814328. Retrieved 18 February 2022.
  121. ^ "Chornobyl tragedy". Archived from the original on 13 April 2014.
  122. ^ Dederichs, H.; Pillath, J.; Heuel-Fabianek, B.; Hill, P.; Lennartz, R. (2009): Langzeitbeobachtung der Dosisbelastung der Bevölkerung in radioaktiv kontaminierten Gebieten Weißrusslands - Korma-Studie Archived 5 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Vol. 31, series "Energy & Environment" by Forschungszentrum Jülich, ISBN 978-3-89336-562-3[page needed]
  123. ^ Tondel, M. (2004). "Increase of regional total cancer incidence in north Sweden due to the Chernobyl accident?". Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health. 58 (12): 1011–1016. doi:10.1136/jech.2003.017988. PMC 1732641. PMID 15547062.
  124. ^ Inga hållpunkter för ökad cancerrisk i Sverige Archived 8 June 2012 at the Wayback Machine (article in Swedish from the Swedish doctors magazine)
  125. ^ Scherb, Hagen; Weigelt, Eveline. "Congenital Malformation and Stillbirth in Germany and Europe Before and After the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Accident" (PDF).
  126. ^ Scherb, H; Voigt, K (2007). "Trends in the human sex odds at birth in Europe and the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant accident". Reproductive Toxicology. 23 (4): 593–9. doi:10.1016/j.reprotox.2007.03.008. PMID 17482426.
  127. ^ Scherb, Hagen; Voigt, Kristina (2011). "The human sex odds at birth after the atmospheric atomic bomb tests, after Chernobyl, and in the vicinity of nuclear facilities". Environmental Science and Pollution Research. 18 (5): 697–707. doi:10.1007/s11356-011-0462-z. PMID 21336635. S2CID 5866510.
  128. ^ Mürbeth, S; Rousarova, M; Scherb, H; Lengfelder, E (2004). "Thyroid cancer has increased in the adult populations of countries moderately affected by Chernobyl fallout". Medical Science Monitor. 10 (7): CR300–6. PMID 15295858.
  129. ^ Cardis, Elisabeth; Krewski, Daniel; Boniol, Mathieu; Drozdovitch, Vladimir; Darby, Sarah C.; Gilbert, Ethel S.; Akiba, Suminori; Benichou, Jacques; Ferlay, Jacques; Gandini, Sara; Hill, Catherine; Howe, Geoffrey; Kesminiene, Ausrele; Moser, Mirjana; Sanchez, Marie; Storm, Hans; Voisin, Laurent; Boyle, Peter (2006). "Estimates of the cancer burden in Europe from radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident". International Journal of Cancer. 119 (6): 1224–1235. doi:10.1002/ijc.22037. PMID 16628547.
  130. ^ IARC Press release on the report 'Estimates of the cancer burden in Europe from radioactive fallout from the Chernobyl accident' Archived 15 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  131. ^ Briefing document: Cancer burden in Europe following Chernobyl Archived 18 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  132. ^ Davidson, Nick (13 July 2006). "Chernobyl's 'nuclear nightmares'". Horizon. Retrieved 2 April 2008.
  133. ^ "Inside Chernobyl's Sarcophagus" (13 July 1996), Horizon, BBC.
  134. ^ Allison, Wade (24 November 2006). "How dangerous is ionising radiation?". Archived from the original on 17 May 2007.
  135. ^ Allison, Wade (2006). "The safety of nuclear radiation; a careful re-examination for a world facing climate change" (PDF). Physics Department of Oxford University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 March 2008. Retrieved 30 July 2007. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  136. ^ A video of Fusco discussing his photo essay project on Chernobyl. Mediastorm.com. Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  137. ^ information Paul Fusco's book on the Chernobyl legacy Archived 6 April 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Magnumphotos.com (26 April 1986). Retrieved 26 April 2012.
  138. ^ "Those who stayed in Chernobyl and Fukushima: An excerpt from the new TED Book brings you inside Control Room 4". TED. 31 October 2013. Retrieved 30 May 2014.
  139. ^ Bandashevsky, Y. I, "Pathology of Incorporated Ionizing Radiation", Belarus Technical University, Minsk. 136 pp., 1999.[page needed]
  140. ^ "Nouvelles plaintes de malades français après Tchernobyl" (in French). RFI. 26 April 2006. Retrieved 26 April 2006. (includes Audio files, with an interview with Chantal Loire, president of the French Association of Thyroid-Affected People Archived 1 December 2006 at the Wayback Machine, as well as interviews with member of the CRIIRAD)
  141. ^ a b Renn, O (1990). "Public responses to the chernobyl accident". Journal of Environmental Psychology. 10 (2): 151–167. doi:10.1016/s0272-4944(05)80125-2.
  142. ^ Rautenbach, J., Tonhauser, W., Wetherall, A., Schwartz, J., Moser, B., Von Busekist, O., ... Desart, R. D. (2006). International Nuclear Law in the Post-Chernobyl Period(Rep.). International Atomic Energy Agency.

External links[edit]