Sentences with phrase «with nuclear fallout»

What I can say is we pick up right where we left off with the nuclear fallout happening in the States.
The John Wayne myth revolves around the legend that dust contaminated with nuclear fallout was...» More...

Not exact matches

Kids like me, myself included, rode bikes in fallout rain and swam in rivers with nuclear run off, as our government kept silent about the disaster.
To introduce a unit on photosynthesis, for instance, he launches into a story from his childhood about building a fallout shelter with a friend after seeing a TV movie about a nuclear attack.
tryin'to remove more omega 6 from my sweet pots... peel»em deeply... cut»em thin... soak in distilled (thirsty... negatively charged water)... it bonds with inorganic positively charged minerals and almost all toxins are positively charged... fukushima daiichi fallout (plus the over 2000 nuclear weapons which have been tested and all the power plant leaks and meltdowns etc.)... anyway... i soak the super thin sweet potato pieces dump the hopefully filled up with toxins soak water... then boil my thin sweets in new distilled water... hope this is removing a bunch of the omega 6... not sure however... anyway... no regular potatoes for me... just sayin.
fallout 3 is your game with guns instead of swords and a nuclear waste land instead of a medevil setting.
It's been four months since we last caught up with the Malibu Crew on The Last Man On Earth, but not to worry, they're exactly where we left them: On a yacht and headed for Mexico to escape nuclear fallout and the unstable, heavily armed Pat (Mark Boone Junior).
Leaving only the mansion's facade untouched, workmen gutted everything within, replacing it with a steel frame and a complex labyrinth deep below ground that soon came to include a top - secret nuclear fallout shelter.
You and your squad of Desert Rangers must traverse the remains of a land laid to waste by nuclear war. The Wasteland's hellish landscape is waiting for you, so arm your team to the teeth with the most devastating weaponry this side of the fallout zone.
She makes video installations that poetically grapple with threats to the natural world, from the extinction of species to long - lasting environmental disasters such as the nuclear fallout of Chernobyl.
Later, while serving in the Army in Germany, I was tasked with training soldiers to read maps so they could plot nuclear fallout
For instance, «Freeze, Memory,» Charrière's first outing at Sean Kelly last year, featured double - exposed photographs of a former Soviet Union nuclear testing site in Kazakhstan speckled with fragments of fallout.
Charrière's first outing at Sean Kelly last year, featured double - exposed photographs of a former Soviet Union nuclear testing site in Kazakhstan speckled with fragments of fallout.
And it was her recognition of an exact parallel with the steady rain of fallout from nuclear testing that helped her explain what we knew... and didn't know... about the consequences and potential collateral damage from heedless tampering with global ecosystems.
«There are so many [problems] from which to choose,» Sharon Squassoni, a military strategy expert and member of the Bulletin's Science and Security Board, said with a little laugh that I'll hear in my head as the nuclear fallout fills my lungs.
It's hardly a perfect fuel, as accidents like Japan's Fukushima fallout have shown, but with safety precautions new nuclear plants can meaningfully offset dirtier types of energy, supporters say.
The word he uses is technocrat, and one example of his dangerously brilliant and impractical ideas was to fuel early spacecraft with nuclear, before they knew about the consequences of fallout.
Amongst the fallout from nuclear explosions was carbon 14, an unstable isotope of carbon that has six protons and eight neutrons in the nuclei of its atoms (the most abundant by far, forming 98.9 % of all carbon on Earth, is carbon 12 with six protons and six neutrons).
That missing radioactivity, originating as fallout from atmospheric nuclear tests during the 1950s and 1960s, routinely provides researchers with a benchmark against which they can gauge how much new ice has accumulated on a glacier or ice field.
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