Added: 4 years ago
From: stephendonnelly88
Views: 23,901
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (50)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Tape. Excellent to seal gaps where radioactive dust could get in.

  • Are these scientists still alive this day?

  • He talks about this disaster so matter of factly...even grins. You would think he would be horrified. So sad and scary. Others were brave though.

  • Oh my Fucking God !!! These people are in charge of Chernobyl ???

    I'll get my AK47, "Thats a good idea" " Where's the uranium gone ?" They put sticky tape round their ankles and wrists and go in for a look !!!

    A toy tank !!!! Have they heard of Meccano or Lego ?  You could'nt make this stuff up...... Priceless. God bless Russia and thank you.

    So very Brave

  • Oh my Fucking God !!! These people are in charge of Chernobyl ???

    I'll get my AK47, "Thats a good idea" What the hell's going on ?

  • LOL, using an AK and a Toy tank for 15Ru can do more than super expensive machinery

  • To think humans will use this against other humans in war or not is unthinkable and beyond barbaric!! Nuclear war, I hear folks say all the time just Nuke'em', well they have no clue thats forsure!!

  • Comment removed

  • We used the famous Kalishnikof gun and a few bottles of Vodka.

  • Did a bit of quick math. The elephant's foot would give you a lethal dose of radiation in less than one minute.

  • @jadedmastermind its just too bad you dont need math to understand that approaching an object that is emitting 10k roentgens/hour will instantly give you a lethal dose.

  • In soviet Ukraine, fuel spends you!

  • now THAT is radioactive! All Ive got is betafites, urananite, and uranophane, all feeble compared to that stuff.

  • if all else failed we could try firearms ....... booommm another disaster

  • Comment removed

  • i bet all that meterial that thew reactor was made of was melted and seeped through burnt holes that solidified later and all that molten meterial became what was called the elephents foot... there could have been a nulcear "implosion" instead of and explosion, melted the reacters insides, and then seeped through the place making the elephents foot... they would have to see all the meterials that made the elephents foot up and compare them to the meterials around the place and inside the reactor

  • Rusia, Ucraine, whatever.. do they speak both same language right?

  • no...

  • Really? I didn't know. What are the main differences between Ucraine language and the Rusia language? At least do you have the same chirlilic alphabet?

  • Just look it up on Wikipedia, I'm not certain all the differences, since I don't speak either language, but they do speak different languages.

  • Why all say "Russian"??? Its UKRAINE!

  • Its probably because it was a part of soviet union before and the fact that many americans cant tell most of the european countries apart.

  • @SDYDen Ukraine uses "Cryllic" or however it's spelled, which is the primary language of Russia. In the US, we speak English, even though the UK does, which is all the way in Europe.

  • One of them looks at a gieger counter and says: well. motherfucker.

  • the russian scientific method, shoot items with the good old kalashnikov

  • youv already got radiation poisoning, dont get cancer too.

  • why on earth they didnt gave the scientist some oxitune masks ore smthing?

  • hmmm...giant radioactive mass...cant seem to get a sample...

    lets fucking a shoot it with an AK!!!

  • 10,000 roentgents an hour,thats more than 2 roentgents a second!!!

  • Holy shit! You would recieve a fatal dose in about 3 minutes. Geez.

  • @magicmaker15 Our people made of steel)))

  • army->police->KGB->police..... so that's how the russian/soviet chain of command works, no when i translate that into a more explicit common language "don't bother me with that shit, i'm not in charge at all" russian/soviet responsibility...

  • Comment removed

  • Mostly sand and graphite with some, metal, some uranium fuel, and concrete, melted together at 5,000 to 10,000 degrees, and melted through the floor.

    Kind of a dirty, radioactive concrete/glass mix.

  • Now the "foot" it's about 10.000 Roentgent per hour that can kill anyone exposed in a hour...

    Scare if near...

  • The radio of the stone.20 mR per hour.1,000 microroentgens equal one milliroentgen and 1,000 milliroentgens equal 1 roentgen. So one roentgen is 100,000 times the radiation of a city. A dose of 500 roentgens within 5 hours is fatal to humans. Interestingly, it takes about 2 1/2 times that dosage to kill a chicken and over 100 times that to kill a cockroach. This sort of radiation level can not be found in Chernobyl now. After explosion, places near reactor were emitting 3,000-30,000 R per hour.

  • To begin our journey, we must learn a little something about radiation. It is really very simple, and the device we use for measuring radiation levels is called a geiger counter . If you flick it on in Kiev, it will measure about 12-16 microroentgen per hour. In a typical city of Russia and America, it will read 10-12 microroentgen per hour.

  • yeah... shooting the elephant foot with a kalashnikov, that's the russian way of science!

  • Gotta love Russian science! XD

  • i like it :)

  • Garbage, trash, junk, etc.

  • I can't believe only 2500 people have watched this in one year

  • True, well I guess people only like to watch Soulja Boy rubbish these days. I find these documentaries very interesting, thanks for posting.

  • This is very interesting to me too.

  • i think the reason that nobody's watching this is because this documentary is over 15 years out of date.

  • I don't think it's out of date,of course; it's 15 years old but that doesn't make it "out of date".

    There are a few good documentaries about Chernobyl and The Zone, this is one of them.

  • i agree. i'm just saying they should do another documentary showing some of the ramifications that have made themselves known in the last 20 years.

  • yeah me too, its history that we were here to witness...

  • i didn't witness it. it happened 3 years before i was born...i got to see the wall come down though. at the tender age of 3 months ^_^

  • neither did but when my history yaps on how we should listen in on the new and then suddenly goes off topic about chernobyl that's when i switched on in history, it happened two years before i was born cause i was in 1988

Loading...
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more