For those most-interested in the "nuclear" part of the title:
> As a result, the site — along with its 200,000 liters of diesel fuel, 24,000,000 liters of biological waste, and 1.2 million units of radioactive waste — was left behind, forever buried in the snow.
Not sure how much a "unit" of radioactive waste is here. The site had a PM-2A "portable" reactor, which was removed during decommissioning.
Sometimes I read the headlines and then click on the story and the headline here doesn't match the story. Maybe it's Google translate losing the thought? But in this case they match exactly! Nice!
4 comments
[ 2.3 ms ] story [ 20.6 ms ] thread> As a result, the site — along with its 200,000 liters of diesel fuel, 24,000,000 liters of biological waste, and 1.2 million units of radioactive waste — was left behind, forever buried in the snow.
Not sure how much a "unit" of radioactive waste is here. The site had a PM-2A "portable" reactor, which was removed during decommissioning.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camp_Century
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Project_Iceworm
TFA is just a re-write of existing journalism from last week but with more sensationalist language. Most recently discussed here:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=42262547