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10h
World Politics Review on MSN80 Years After Hiroshima, the Nuclear Taboo Can’t Be Taken for Granted
Although the atomic bomb hasn't been used in war since it was dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the possibility of its ...
2d
Money Talks News on MSNNuclear Bomb Survival Distance Revealed in New Scientific Analysis
New scientific modeling reveals the shocking distances needed to survive a nuclear bomb explosion and its devastating effects ...
EVERY year, but particularly today, we hear the echoes of the grief of less than 100,000 officially recognized survivors of ...
I was 13 years old on Aug. 9, 1945, when the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan. We lived less than two ...
In the wake of the blast, these eerie shadows were left etched into surfaces across the city—almost like a photo negative of ...
3h
ScienceAlert on MSNA Nuclear Winter Could Destroy Much of The World's Food Supply
The simulations suggest that it could take between 7 and 12 years for global corn production to recover from nuclear winter, ...
As the world remembers the victims of Hiroshima, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi warns of a growing global ...
The world entered its nuclear epoch 80 years ago on August 6, 1945. The US dropped an atomic bomb on the Japanese city of ...
22d
The Daily Galaxy on MSNHow the First Nuclear Explosion Led to the Discovery of a Rare Form of Matter
On July 16, 1945, the United States conducted the world’s first-ever nuclear test, known as the Trinity test, in the desert of New Mexico. This test marked a watershed moment in history, not only ...
The average age of survivors is now 86 and some fear their stories will die with them, while warnings have been issued about ...
Studies of the potential climate effects of nuclear war in the 1980s focused on northern hemisphere, large-scale nuclear conflicts, and predicted more extreme global “nuclear winter” scenarios.
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