Even eighty years after the first nuclear bomb test, the consequences still haunt people all around the world. Radioactive fallout hasn’t just vanished; instead, it continues to affect the health of ...
Editor’s note: “Behind the News” is the product of Sun staff assisted by the Sun’s AI lab, which includes a variety of tools such as Anthropic’s Claude, Perplexity AI, Google Gemini and ChatGPT. On ...
On June 19, Israeli military spokesman Brigadier General Effie Defrin mistakenly stated that the Israel Defense Forces had struck Iran’s Bushehr Nuclear Power Plant. Although Israel quickly walked ...
Introduction : Anthropocene journey -- Part one. The destroyer of worlds. Hiroshima : an invisible scar -- Critical mass : MAUD in the nuclear garden -- Las Vegas : every mushroom cloud has a silver ...
Fallout Fallout's original creators say that Fallout 3 and 4 aren't quite what they would've done, but 'sales say people love what they did' Fallout The best thing about Fallout New Vegas was right ...
TULAROSA — Mary Riseley walked through glowing rows of luminarias looking for her mother’s name at a vigil for New Mexico downwinders Wednesday, 80 years to the day after the first nuclear bomb test.
The Rulison test — conducted at a depth of 8,425 feet — was the deepest subterranean nuclear-bomb detonation conducted in U.S. history.
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