Yes indeed. 225 here baby #Geaux #Tigers
Hell yeah!
Acadiana
Baton Rouge

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he wasn't even looking at me and he found me
art blog(derogatory)

if i look back, i am lost
KIROKAZE
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵
𓃗

pixel skylines
RMH
tumblr dot com
Not today Justin

shark vs the universe

titsay

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Love Begins

Kaledo Art
Keni
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸

Product Placement
macklin celebrini has autism
seen from Brazil
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seen from Malaysia
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seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
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seen from Brazil

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@nick-zombie
Yes indeed. 225 here baby #Geaux #Tigers
Hell yeah!
Acadiana
Baton Rouge
Nightmares by TimurKhabirov Edited by metalheadx-x
I will never not reblog this.
The catastrophic nuclear disaster the world had long feared finally happened in 1986 at the Chernobyl plant in Ukraine. Reactor number four exploded early one morning in April, sending a vast plume of radioactive fallout in the atmosphere. This would contaminate large areas of the western Soviet Union and Europe, with nuclear rain being recorded as far away as Ireland. The initial power excursion was followed by further chemical and has explosions, then fire. Unlike those in most western plants, the reactor building was not a reinforced containment vessel designed to limit the effects of just such an accident. It was therefore destroyed, allowing disastrous quantities of radioactive material to escape. Yet this was an accident that could have been avoided.
Ironically, the catalyst was an experiment carried out to test the reactors safety. Operators were worried that a power failure might result in the reactor core overheating, as vast quantities of cooling water were required and standby generators didn’t get the pumps back up to speed for over a minute. They therefore decided to test wether an emergency core-cooling procedure would work should such a situation arise. Had regulations been followed there would have been no problem, but safety features were disabled in order to complete the test. This decision proved fatal. After complex setup procedures were completed, the test commenced but within seconds the core went critical and a powerful explosion rocked the plant.
The aftermath was horrific, though Soviet authorities initially tried to conceal the scale of the disaster. The town of Pripyat was evacuated the following day and remains a deserted time capsule. The accident site was contained within a vast concrete sarcophagus at the centre of the 30km exclusion some around Chernobyl that is in force to this day.