To clean the streets up after Chernobyl, they sprayed Bourda DeconGel. "Bourda" means molasses.
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Spain

seen from Latvia
seen from United States
seen from Denmark
seen from Yemen
seen from Spain
seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from United States
seen from Spain

seen from Russia
seen from Türkiye
seen from Philippines
seen from United States
seen from Spain
To clean the streets up after Chernobyl, they sprayed Bourda DeconGel. "Bourda" means molasses.
Repulsion Decon
The above image is a product called DeconGel. So is the below image.
The purpose of which is as follows from the DeconGel website:
"DeconGel® is a proven, tough, professional, military-grade, safe to use and handle, water soluble, and environmentally friendly product for extreme, hard-to-clean contamination remediation challenges for any industry. If you can only take one product with you - this is it. It is exceptionally effective against radioactive isotopes but has the strength to pull off any job – from radioactive isotopes for nuclear plant decommissioning and nuclear medicine spills, to toxic industrial chemicals and materials such as mercury, PCB, acids, lead, asbestos, and methamphetamines. DeconGel ® is effective, has outstanding efficacy, and can save time and money through reduced labor, waste disposal needs and EPA reporting requirements."
I saw this on CNN this afternoon while at work. Now, we keep the volume at 0 and I was on the other side of the bar.
My immediate thought: Why is CNN doing a news feed on repulsion gel?
Now...on seeing the pictures, tell me that wasn't your first thought, too.