Nowhere Man 1966 |
10-30-2008 09:35 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mohoender
I don't really think about making this a true thread but I had this funny info from someone who visited Chernobyl several time as early as 1992.
People are back in the exclusion zone and farmers are rebuilding and cultivating the lands again (pay attention to what you buy). In fact they have been back for some times already.:rolleyes:
Wild life is everywhere.
The only zone that remained untouched is the "Forêt Rousse" (Red haired forest) where most of the radiation fall down. There, trees and life forms are really twisted, with roots growing from tree tops...
The stored equipments that were left behind (helicopters for exemple) had been used as spare parts by the Ukrainian government. Therefore, no need of thermic to find an Ukrainian helicopter in the night, a geiger counter will do just fine. That might help in T2K. :D
When exposed to rads your max exposure is of 2.5 rad a year. When exposed to 25 to 100 rad, you die. Surprisingly, a fireman exposed to 400 is still alive and fine but he remain the sole exception to these days (as no one really feel like joining with him). I'll be thinking about including this in my game, a resilient PC or NPC could be interesting. The measurment has changed and I have trouble finding my way around but I hope you get the general idea.:o
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400 rads, that reminds me of one episode of the old TV series, "The Bold Ones," where one of the doctors was exposed to 400 rads and it goes through on what they had to do to treat him medically. I remember they had to give him blood transfusions and a bone marrow transplant. BTW, the series was made from 1969 to 1973 and it featured stories from medicine, police, lawyers and a senator. The medical version is really interesting, they go through the current (then) experimental ways of medicine such as artificial hearts and what could be early genetic experimentation to grow things like new heart cells and the like. Back to the radiation episode, the only unrealistic thging was the doctor didn't lose his hair but other than that, it was quite well done and researched.
I should buy some VHS tapes, they never released the shows on VHS or DVD. BTW, here in the U.S., we are going to a digital TV format, one goof thing about it is where one TV station can broadcast a main channel and a couple of "subchannels." Here in Pittsburgh on one of our channels, there is a network that shows old TV shows, sort of like a "poor man's 'TV Land'" (although I think it blows TV Land away), "Retro Televison Network," where I catch old shows like "Airwolf." It is a subchannel to the NBC affiliate here. One good thing, if I'm too poor for cable, at least I have more over the air choices for TV with digital coming in.
Chuck M.
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