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Video from time I spent around the still radioactive Chernobyl, the reactor and the abandoned town of Pripyat. http://www.carlmontgomery.com for answers to the usual "isn't this absurdly dangerous?" types of questions and how you can get there yourself, check out my FAQ http://www.carlmontgomery.com/faq/ More pics and video from Chernobyl is at http://www.carlmontgomery.com/radiation/ POLISH TRANSLATION: http://youtube.com/watch?v=Lc-u1rq2u8w (Thanks to dexter192 http://www.arek-w.yoyo.pl/ for the translation) 400,000+ views and 1000+comments on 11th April 08 300,000+ views on 3rd Feb 08 Honors for This Video: #7 - Most Discussed (All Time) - Travel & Events - Australia #88 - Most Responded (This Week) - Australia #3 - Most Viewed (All Time) - Travel & Events - Australia #2 - Top Favorites (All Time) - Travel & Events - Australia #2 - Top Rated (All Time) - Travel & Events - Australia #79 - Top Rated (All Time) - Travel & Events

Tags: Chernobyl Pripyat radiation USSR CCCP nuclear Chernobil adventure cityscape landmark events destination travel log
Greenpeace channel: http://www.youtube.com/greenpeace "20 years ago: Chernobyl" is a fast moving short film - like a music video - about the Chernobyl disaster and Greenpeace anti-nuke campaign. Film by Christoph Schwaiger. 3D animation by Tanooki. Archive material by Penninger archive. Music by Yap music. Production by Yap films. Visit the Greenpeace website for more information or to sign the "No More Chernobyls" petition.

Tags: Chernobyl nuclear radiation music Greenpeace politics news geotagged geo:lat=51.266667 geo:long=30.233333
Part 1 from Discovery Channel documentary. Russian subs, English off-voice, Russian dialogues.

Tags: disaster chernobil chernobyl nuclear reactor explosion radioactivity cccp vladimir irich lenin
We've noticed that people don't have any idea what (or where) we're talking about when we mention that we recently traveled to Chernobyl & Pripyat. Pripyat is a completely modern abandoned city about 2km from Chernobyl, inside of the Chernobyl exclusion zone, in Ukraine. Over 20 years ago (26 April, 1986), there was an accident in one of the nuclear reactors there that became the worst technological disaster in history. We got some really fantastic footage of both cities as well as the reactor. When we put the film together, we thought it would be helpful to include some information about what happened. Here's the final product. This footage of Chernobyl and Pripyat was filmed on August 7, 2007 by Jason Strain. Narration is by Laura Corliss. Music by Brokenkites. More information about Chernobyl is located at: http://www.chernobyl.info/ A higher resolution version of this film is located here: http://revver.com/video/635499/affiliate/151573/chernobyl-pripyat/

Tags: chernobyl pripyat nuclear reactor radiation accident disaster abandoned places ghost town stalker cod4 exclusion zone
This film shows the terrifying images captured by the Russian filmmaker Vladimir Shevchenko on scene at Chernobyl those dreadful days in April 1986. Shevchenko later died suffering from the radiation he exposed himself to. Although his name is not among the official casualties of the accident, this last tragic film of him keeps his name alive forever.

Tags: chernobyl disaster nuclear radioactive russia ukraine
http://www.nextgenupdate.com Ok, this is truly amazing, click more to read the full story. This was by some man who posted on ps3 forums who traveled to Chernobyl a month ago and took these strange yet totally bizarre pictures which resemble the single player of COD4. This is huge. --------------------- Alright there, this is my first post so thought I'd start with my visit to Chernobyl last month. I'm based in the North West and been doing UE around here for the past few years but last year did a few international sites including Iran, Macedonia and France but this was the one I'd wanted to do for years, considered it along with Famagusta as the 'holy grails' of UE. Anyway, here goes: Picked up in a Lada early on the Sunday morning and we were swiftly driven onto the motorway and onwards towards Chernobyl. I'd read plenty reports on the net if people who'd visited so I was in great anticipation for what lay ahead. As we approached the 50 km exclusion zone around the site the first signs of paranoia started to hit. From a pretty clear day the sky had seemed to turn a murky dull grey the closer we got. Then I started to notice the driver, who worked for the government daily within the Chernobyl site violently twitch every few minutes. Was this a tick he'd been born with since birth or was it from working in the most radioactive site on earth? I couldn't help feel it was the latter. We pulled up to the edge of the exclusion zone and documents were passed on to the soldiers at the military checkpoint. After a few minutes there we were allowed to pass and thats when things changed even more. The roads were deadly quiet. Not a single other car there or sign of life anywhere. Not surprising really seeing as the area has been off limits since the explosion 20 years ago. Not really the place you'd want to set up home. Except some mad **bleep** did. Out of all the hundreds of thousands that had to leave there homes after the accident, a few hundred had returned, mostly older people in there 80's who'd lived there all their lives. They weren't allowed to do but the government had turned a blind eye to them. We were offered the chance to go into the forests to search for them and meet them but we declined the offer. Quite what you're supposed to say to a old Russian bloke whose been living in the wilderness growing and eating his own crops planted in the most toxic land in the world apart from "Alright mate" is beyond me. So onwards we travelled up to another checkpoint at 30km and the final one at 5km. We then travel past huge abandoned building works, cooling towers and more nuclear reactors that were being built at the time of the accident before we reach the damaged reactor itself. We get out of the car for the first time and thats when things start to set in and you realise just where you are. I'd read about the reactor beforehand about how it was covered by a "crumbling sarcophagus" that had been "hastily built" by the Soviet government following the accident and was "long overdue" a new safer containment unit. I didn't think/worry about this too much until our guide reached for his geiger counter. He'd first got the counter out at the edge of the 50km zone where it had given a reading of 20 microentgens. Normal radiation is around 10mgs. As he turned it on now though it started climbing. And climbing. And climbing. And beeping like **bleep**. Until it hit 800mgs and he turned it off. "It ok. We only staying here for few minutes" ------------ FULL STORY AT http://www.nextgenboards.com/vb/call-duty-4-discussion/8215-map-real-life.html Honors for This Video: Honors for This Video: #55 - Most Discussed (Today) - Entertainment #95 - Most Viewed (Today) - Entertainment Honours for This Video: #86 - Most Discussed (This Week) - Entertainment - Global #98 - Most Viewed (This Week) - Entertainment - Global Honors for This Video: #71 - Most Discussed (This Week) - Entertainment #62 - Most Viewed (This Week) - Entertainment #81 - Top Favorites (This Week) - Entertainment #90 - Top Rated (This Week) - Entertainment

Tags: call of duty real life maps offline single player cod4 cod3 outsider glitches glitching glitch hacks codes Chernobyl
*** OK seems like there is a huge debate on the choice of music for this video, well I got something to say: Art is a subjective matter, the same piece of art could evoke 2 very different emotions in 2 different people, YET the message of the video remains the same even if the music was removed. So my advice is to turn off the sound if you got any complaints about the music and save me your pseudo-intellectualism. The song is Radioaktiv by David Padilla. This is a video dedicated to all who suffered from the Chernobyl tragedy, made by a good friend of mine.

Tags: Chernobyl Dedication Ukrain Russia Belarus
http://www.espacioblog.com/forestman/post/2006/04/26/chernobil-20-aniversario-un-desastre Chernobil - Chernobyl

Tags: Chernobil Chernobyl nuclear
Great video of Family life in Chernobyl before and after the nuclear accident. Music is "Huns and Dr. Beeker - Ghost Town." Very sad.

Tags: Chernobyl Nuclear Atomic Accident Pripyat Pripiat Reactor Russia Ukraine
A short film by Irish artist Nicky Larkin, shot in Pripyat, in the Chernobyl exclusion zone. The city of Pripyat was once considered the finest place to live in the whole of the Soviet Union. A thoroughly modern city, it was built in 1970 to house the workers of the new Chernobyl nuclear power plant and their families, and was once a happy home to 50,000 people. In the aftermath of the accident in Chernobyl in April 1986, the residents of Pripyat were instructed to pack one suitcase and told they would be returning in three days. One thousand buses were drafted in from all across the Soviet Union to take the residents of Pripyat out of their now highly contaminated homes. They never returned. 21 years later Pripyat stands empty, a ghost town deep within the Chernobyl exclusion zone, the last remaining Soviet city. This haunting experimental film by Irish artist Nicky Larkin takes you inside Pripyat and examines the relationship between time, nature and culture, in a city that will never be lived in again. Selected for The European Media Art Festival 2008, Osnabruck, Germany (www.emaf.de) Shot in September 2007 Running Time - 16 minutes (Due to youtube limitations, it has been neccessary to split Pripyat into two parts. If you wish to see the unsplit original version with stereo sound, visit www.myspace.com/nickylarkin) Nicky Larkin has a solo show in The Belltable Arts Centre, Limerick, in October 2008, where he will create large-scale multi-screen video and sound installations based on his visit to Pripyat.

Tags: Pripyat Chernobyl Nicky Larkin Birr Nuclear Disaster Soviet Union Tarkovsky Stalker Bela Tarr
S.T.A.L.K.E.R. gameplay by bushladen, only static lighting instead of full dynamic lighting

Tags: S.T.A.L.K.E.R. bushladen gameplay gaming pc chernobyl shadow
This is a English project that I did for school on the after effects of Chernobyl and just some of the harsh truths that radiation causes I hope you learn something and I hope it touches you like it touches me every time I watch it even though I made it

Tags: Chernobyl Angel Sarah McLachlan
http://www.greenpeace.org/international/ "20 years ago: Chernobyl" is a fast moving short film - like a music video - about the Chernobyl disaster and Greenpeace anti-nuke campaign. Film by Christoph Schwaiger. 3D animation by Tanooki. Archive material by Penninger archive. Music by Yap music. Production by Yap films.

Tags: Chernobyl russia disaster radiation music Greenpeace politics reactor nuclear power plant Soviet Union 20th anniversary
Desastre de Chernobyl em 26 de abril de 1986

Tags: Desastre morte destruição dor Chernobyl nuclear
a video clip of inside the exploded reactor. Thanks to hboy007 for his translation which reads as follows: inside the Sarcophagus the radiation levels are as high as 3400 Roentgen per hour [1 R = 2.58 * 10^-4 C/kg]. The working time of the engineers is determined by the radioactivity they are exposed to. When the dosimeter each of them carries starts to beep alarmingly, they need to leave the reactor immediately. Sergeij K. who recorded this footage usually stays a little longer. The white dots that can bee seen on the pictures that look like snow are also caused by the radiation which the digital cameras are quite prone to. The clock in this control room stopped at the exact time the incident took place: 1:23 am, april 26th, 1986 Despite the strongly limited time, work is done without hurry to avoid mistakes. The mounting teams know exactly where the other ones interrupted their repairing right there. Inside the exploded reactor block, additional staircases were installed to reach most of the locations but this isn't possible. Totally, only one third of the entire reactor block has been explored. The sectors have names and numbers which the workers shout out to one another. Every now and then men can be heard wading through water. Rain and melting water are the biggest enemy of the Sarcophagus. These caused gradual decay during the past 20 years. Sergeij likes to compare the inside of the Sarcophagus to a mine field. Each step can decide upon what radiation dose one is exposed to. At this place it is really dirty as can be seen by the black speckles on the yellow gloves. "dirty" is what the workers call the radiation reaching extreme levels. The cotton dress and the plastic overall offer only limited protection against (alpha) radiation. The helmets are considered much more important because pieces of stone could fall down from the ceiling. The once molten, highly radioactive material has been cast to bizarre forms.Temperatures exceeded 1000 degrees Celsius at the time of the disaster. Sergeij gave names to these lumps. This one he calls "elephant's foot". Sergeij is now right underneath the ceiling of the Sarcophagus. It's cracked, corroded and full of holes. it's area measures 100 square meters. The extent can be by the light shining inside. Should The Sarcophagus one day collapse, a large nuclear dust cloud would be generated. Experts consider it the safest way to build another Sarcophagus around the first, older one. A hall larger than the Statue of Liberty, called "Arche", that would cost about 650.000.000 Euros. Here, the white dots caused by radioactivity can be seen again. This sprinklers were installed to bind the floating, radioactive dust particles. At least a little protection in this hazardous job. This video clip was from this german website: http://www.stern.de/politik/ausland/559531.html?nv=ct_mt

Tags: Chernobyl Nuclear Reactor Accident
丸い地球は誰のもの 砕け散る波は誰のもの

Tags: the blue hearts 甲本ヒロト
Il 26 aprile 1986 nella centrale nucleare di Chernobyl accade il più grave disastro nucleare di sempre. Una serie di errate comunicazioni e di errori umani culminano nella fusione del nocciolo del reattore quattro. La copertura di 1000 tonnellate del reattore viene lanciata in aria, spargendo frammenti incandescenti di uranio fino a 3 chilometri di distanza.

Tags: Chernobyl Nucleare Radiazioni Centrale Russia Ucraina Morti Cancro
On this day in 1986, the world's worst nuclear accident to date occurs at the Chernobyl nuclear plant near Kiev in Ukraine. The full toll from this disaster is still being tallied, but experts believe that thousands of people died and as many as 70,000 suffered severe poisoning. In addition, a large area of land may not be livable for as much as 150 years. The 18-mile radius around Chernobyl was home to almost 150,000 people who had to be permanently relocated. The Soviet Union built the Chernobyl plant, which had four 1,000-megawatt reactors, in the town of Pripyat. At the time of the explosion, it was one of the largest and oldest nuclear power plants in the world. The explosion and subsequent meltdown of one reactor was a catastrophic event that directly affected hundreds of thousands of people. Still, the Soviet government kept its own people and the rest of the world in the dark about the accident until days later. At first, the Soviet government only asked for advice on how to fight graphite fires and acknowledged the death of two people. It soon became apparent, however, that the Soviets were covering up a major accident and had ignored their responsibility to warn both their own people and surrounding nations. Two days after the explosion, Swedish authorities began measuring dangerously high levels of radioactivity in their atmosphere. Years later, the full story was finally released. Workers at the plant were performing tests on the system. They shut off the emergency safety systems and the cooling system, against established regulations, in preparation for the tests. Even when warning signs of dangerous overheating began to appear, the workers failed to stop the test. Xenon gases built up and at 1:23 a.m. the first explosion rocked the reactor. A total of three explosions eventually blew the 1,000-ton steel top right off of the reactor. A huge fireball erupted into the sky. Flames shot 1,000 feet into the air for two days, as the entire reactor began to melt down. Radioactive material was thrown into the air like fireworks. Although firefighting was futile, Pripyat's 40,000 people were not evacuated until 36 hours after the explosion. Potentially lethal rain fell as the fires continued for eight days. Dikes were built at the Pripyat River to contain damage from contaminated water run-off and the people of Kiev were warned to stay indoors as a radioactive cloud headed their way. On May 9, workers began encasing the reactor in concrete. Later, Hans Blix of the International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that approximately 200 people were directly exposed and that 31 had died immediately at Chernobyl. The clean-up effort and the general radioactive exposure in the region, however, would prove to be even more deadly. Some reports estimate that as many as 4,000 clean-up workers died from radiation poisoning. Birth defects among people living in the area have increased dramatically. Thyroid cancer has increased tenfold in Ukraine since the accident.

Tags: Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster
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