We are exposed to radiation on a daily basis,
most commonly via energy from the sun, but
heavy doses can be hazardous or even fatal,
particularly radiation given off from the
disintegration of nuclear and atomic waste.
Today we’re going to be exploring places
on our planet in the radioactive red zone.
We’re looking for the worst of the worst
places to avoid, in this episode of the Infographics
Show: Most Radioactive Places on Earth.
At number 10 is The Mediterranean Sea that
surrounds the Italian Peninsula and its islands.
It’s waves break the coasts of 22 countries
in Africa, Europe, the Middle East and Asia.
This idyllic area has been used as a disposal
site for radioactive and other toxic waste
for nearly 30 years.
The Italian mafia has also been accused of
dumping hazardous waste into the Mediterranean,
and 40 ships carrying loads of radioactive
materials have gone missing since 1994.
So it’s worth taking a full body suit if
you’re planning on going snookering in this
sea.
And the Italian mafia doesn’t just dump
waste in their own backyard.
At 9 we have The Somali Coast.
During the 1980s, numerous Swiss and Italian
companies secretly dumped hazardous waste
along the coast.
An Italian crime syndicate sank at least 30
ships loaded with waste off the shores of
Somalia.
The United Nations’ Environment Program
believes that the rusting barrels of waste
washed up on the Somalian coastline during
the 2004 Tsunami, were dumped as far back
as the 1990s.
Birth defects and cancer are still common
in the area up to this day.
Number 8 is The Hanford Site, in Washington,
USA.
This place was an integral part of America’s
atomic bomb project and manufactured the plutonium
used to produce the first nuclear bomb used
at Nagasaki.
During the cold war, production ramped up
and Hanford supplied the plutonium for most
of America’s 60,000 nuclear weapons.
It has since been decommissioned, but the
area is still home to a huge amount of nuclear
waste and will continue to be a risk area
for many years to come.
At number 7 is Mayak, in Russia’s north-east.
The industrial complex of Mayak, has had a
nuclear plant for decades, and in 1957 was
the site of one of the world’s worst nuclear
accidents.
At Karachay, Mayak, a poorly maintained storage
tank exploded, releasing 50-100 tons of high-level
radioactive waste.
Experts believe that Karachay may be the most
radioactive place in the world, and over 400,000
people have been exposed to radiation from
the plant.
Lake Karachay is so tainted by the nearby
nuclear facilities that in 1990, just standing
on the shore for an hour would give you more
than enough radiation to kill you.
On the plus side, lakefront property there
is likely very inexpensive.
At number 6 is Sellafield, located on the
west coast of England.
Sellafield is where, in the early 1950s, a
facility produced the Plutonium-239 required
for the UK’s first nuclear bomb.
In 1957, the plant was the site of the worst
nuclear accident Great Britain has ever seen.
The Windscale Fire blazed for three days,
releasing radioactive gases.
It has been linked to 240 cases of cancer.
The plant releases some 8 million liters of
contaminated waste into the sea on a daily
basis, making the Irish Sea the most radioactive
sea in the world.
And it is home to one of the largest inventories
of untreated waste, including 140 tonnes of
civil plutonium, the largest stockpile in
the world and enough to make hundreds of nuclear
weapons.
Number 5 is another site in Russia, this time
Siberia where a chemical facility is packed
with nuclear waste.
Sitting in uncovered pools are thousands of
liters of liquid waste and 125,000 tons (113
million kg) of solid waste.
In 2000, The Guardian newspaper reported that
a joint team of Russian and American radiation
monitors assessed rivers in the area of a
top-secret Russian nuclear weapons complex
in Siberia, reaching the conclusion that contamination
had reached "staggering" levels, the worst
ever monitored, and was out of "rational control".
At number 4 is Mailuu-Suu, Kyrgyzstan.
From 1946 to 1968, the Zapadnyi Mining and
Chemical Combine at Mailuu-Suu produced and
processed more than 10,000 tons of uranium
ore, mostly to supply the USSR’s nuclear
weapons program with fissile material.
By 2006, it was considered one of the top
ten most polluted sites on Earth, as was mentioned
in that year’s Blacksmith Institute report.
Today, 36 waste dumps are scattered throughout
the area, with just under 2 million cubic
metres of unsecured radioactive mining waste.
At number 3 we have The Polygon in Kazakhstan.
This place was the Soviet Union's primary
location for testing its nuclear weapons during
the Cold War and holds the record for the
largest concentration of nuclear explosions
in the world.
An unnerving 700,000 people live in the area
and though the impact of the radiation exposure
was kept under wraps by the Soviets, until
the facility closed in 1991, Scientists today
estimate that over 200,000 people have health
conditions resulting from the radiation.
At number 2 is one of the world’s worst
and most well remembered nuclear accidents…Chernobyl.
The Chernobyl accident in 1986 was the result
of a flawed reactor design.
The accident released 100 times more radiation
than the Nagasaki and Hiroshima bombs.
It caused over 6 million people to be exposed
to radiation, and estimates as to the number
of deaths that will eventually occur due to
the Chernobyl accident, range from 4,000 to
as high as 93,000.
Even today, the word Chernobyl conjures up
horrifying images of human suffering.
And at number 1 is Fukushima, Japan.
Fresh in our minds, in March 2011 a massive
earthquake with a magnitude of 6.9 triggered
a tsunami along the east coast of Japan.
The tsunami wave flooded the Fukushima Nuclear
Plant, causing three nuclear meltdowns, hydrogen-air
explosions, and the release of radioactive
material.
This led to uncontrollable fires, and the
release of radioactive steam and hundreds
of thousands of litres of contaminated water.
The effect of the Fukushima earthquake in
Japan is said to be the longest-lasting nuclear
danger in the world.
The Fukushima disaster was the most significant
nuclear incident since the Chernobyl disaster
and the second disaster to be given the Level
7 event classification of the International
Nuclear Event Scale.
So, do you live near any of these sites?
How terrified are you of being exposed to
radioactive poisoning?
Let us know in the comments!
Also, be sure to check out our other video
called Could the Black Death Happen Again!
Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t
forget to like, share, and subscribe.
See you next time!
