Justdroppedin
02-05-2025, 12:30 PM
the abandoned
exclusion zone has seen a remarkable recovery of local
megafauna. Herds of grazing ungulates and the large
predators that feed on them have repopulated the landscape in
the total absence of human beings, along with countless small animals.
The potential effects the radiation might be having on this recovering ecosystem and what it might mean for the future of wildlife in the exclusion zone are still not fully understood, so they remain a topic of scientific study and debate today. However, one thing is certain: the plants and animals that now call the exclusion zone home won’t have to worry about human encroachment for a long time, as the entire region has been deemed uninhabitable to humans for at least 20,000 years.
https://i.redd.it/3m8qv7foezge1.jpeg
exclusion zone has seen a remarkable recovery of local
megafauna. Herds of grazing ungulates and the large
predators that feed on them have repopulated the landscape in
the total absence of human beings, along with countless small animals.
The potential effects the radiation might be having on this recovering ecosystem and what it might mean for the future of wildlife in the exclusion zone are still not fully understood, so they remain a topic of scientific study and debate today. However, one thing is certain: the plants and animals that now call the exclusion zone home won’t have to worry about human encroachment for a long time, as the entire region has been deemed uninhabitable to humans for at least 20,000 years.
https://i.redd.it/3m8qv7foezge1.jpeg