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Who knew tomatoes had such a passionate love life once?

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Wasps living around a Cold War-era nuclear facility in South Carolina have built at least four radioactive nests, raising questions about their source of hazardous material and the extent of environmental contamination, according to a report by The New York Times.

Last week, news broke that officials at the site—Savannah River Site (SRS) near Aiken, South Carolina—had found one radioactive nest on July 3. The discovery was documented in a July 22 report by the US Department of Energy, which owns the site.

The report said that the nest was on a post near a tank used to store nuclear waste and that it "was probing 100,000 dpm/100 cm2 beta/gamma." This contamination level "is greater than 10 times the total contamination values" listed in federal regulations for areas that require contamination posting and monitoring, the report said. Still, it concluded that the radioactivity of the nest was considered to be from "onsite legacy radioactive contamination not related to a loss of contamination control."

But the Times uncovered that three additional radioactive nests had been found since the July 3 discovery.

"The U.S. Department of Energy is managing the discovery of four wasp nests with very low levels of radioactive contamination," Edwin Deshong, the manager of the DOE's Savannah River Operations Office, said in an emailed statement to the Times. "The nests do not pose a health risk to SRS workers, the community, or the environment."

The SRS is a 310-square-mile facility built in the 1950s to produce material for nuclear weapons, including plutonium and tritium, a component of hydrogen bombs, the Times noted. Activity at the SRS, which is located near the border with Georgia, declined at the end of the Cold War. The DOE began cleaning up the site in 1996—a slow process that is currently estimated to be completed by 2065.

According to the DOE, the site produced 165 million gallons of radioactive liquid waste, which has been evaporated to 34 million gallons. The site has 51 waste tanks, eight of which have been operationally closed, with the remaining 43 in various states of the closure process.

Outside experts have been quick to point out critical information missing from the DOE's nest report, including the absolute level of radioactivity found in the nest, the specific isotopes that were found, and the type of wasps that built the nest. Some wasps build their nests from mud, while others might use chewed-up pulp from wood.

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Remind me to keep the windows rolled up when I sing in the car.

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/GUlBh

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/liTg8

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Lucy Roberts managed a jewelry store for a year and would bring jewelry home with her, falsifying inventory records. She left the job and later went on a cruise, sending selfies to her former coworkers and telling them how much fun she was having. Police arrested her at the airport when she returned to the UK.

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/ERbIx

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A young female bear caused a stir after wandering out of the forest and into the leafy suburbs of the Lithuanian capital.

For two days, the brown bear ambled through the neighborhoods of Vilnius, trotted across highways and explored backyards — all while being chased by onlookers with smartphones and, eventually, drones.

The government then issued a permit for the bear to be shot and killed.

That did not go down well with Lithuania’s hunters who refused, aware that there is only a tiny number of the protected species in the entire country.

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/1coAV

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Ed the Zebra was captured safely after being located in a pasture near a subdivision in the Christiana community in central Tennessee, the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office confirmed. The sheriff’s office said aviation crews captured the zebra.

“Ed was airlifted and flown by helicopter back to a waiting animal trailer,” the sheriff's office said in a statement.

Video posted by the sheriff's office shows Ed wrapped in a net with his head sticking out as he is carried by the helicopter to the trailer.

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/hVntk

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TLDR: 'members of the beekeeping community came to the rescue, with over two dozen responding to the scene' and 'Hive boxes from the overturned truck were recovered, restored and returned to use. By morning, most bees should have returned to their hives, and those responsible for their delivery will be in charge'

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/1dlJQ

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/G9udS

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/NAD7q

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/43350212

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Archive/mirror: https://archive.ph/PorK6

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