logo
Hive of radioactive WASPS found at nuclear site by officials

Hive of radioactive WASPS found at nuclear site by officials

The Irish Sun5 days ago
A HIVE of radioactive wasps has been discovered at a nuclear facility in the US, according to a public government report.
Startled officials found that the nest clocked in at 100,000dpm, a moderately high radiation level, US outlet WYFF noted.
Advertisement
3
After being discovered on 3 July, the nest has since been sprayed and bagged as radiological waste to be destroyed
Credit: WYFF
Disintegrations per minute (dpm) is the unit used to measure the rate at which a radioactive substance emits radiation.
The report from the US Department of Energy revealed that Radiological Control Operations uncovered a wasp nest attached to a post near a tank at the Savannah River Site in Aiken, South Carolina.
The nest has been described as "onsite legacy radioactive contamination", instead of being a loss of radioactive control.
This means the nest is radioactive as a result of past activities, and not a result of a leak.
Advertisement
READ MORE ON WILDLIFE
While the Department has not detailed how the nest became contaminated, it has assured that the ground and surrounding area have not been contaminated.
After being discovered on 3 July, the nest has since been sprayed and bagged as radiological waste to be destroyed.
'The delay in reporting was to allow time for reviewing previous wildlife contamination for consistency in reporting criteria,'
No other operations were affected by the discovery,
Advertisement
Most read in Science
Breaking
The site was constructed in the 1950s to produce the materials needed to build nuclear weapons during the Cold War.
But cleanup and environmental efforts began in the 1980s after it was declared a Superfund site - a contaminated location that poses potential threats to public health and the environment.
Mutant wolves roaming nuclear wasteland near Chernobyl develop shock 'invincibility' superpower - that could help humans
It is not the only case of radioactive wildlife inhabiting contaminated zones, with Norwegian reindeer becoming contaminated following the fallout of Chernobyl.
Elsewhere in South Carolina, researchers have been monitoring radiation in turtles in the Mohave Desert and the Savannah River.
Advertisement
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory researcher Cyler Conrad, who has been monitoring the turtles, told National Geographic: 'So many different turtles at so many different sites were shaped by nuclear activity that occurred at those locations."
He added: 'I did not have a full appreciation for how widespread those nuclear signals are in the environment.'
3
radioactive-warning-sign-1013477685
Credit: Getty
3
A headshot of a common wasp (vespula vulgaris).
Credit: Getty
Advertisement
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Archaeologists uncover 800-year-old bones with strange details & they offer a surprising insight into Aztec life
Archaeologists uncover 800-year-old bones with strange details & they offer a surprising insight into Aztec life

The Irish Sun

timea day ago

  • The Irish Sun

Archaeologists uncover 800-year-old bones with strange details & they offer a surprising insight into Aztec life

The discovery points at a potential link to the Aztec empire ANCIENT SECRETS Archaeologists uncover 800-year-old bones with strange details & they offer a surprising insight into Aztec life ARCHAEOLOGISTS have uncovered ancient bones that offer a surprising insight into the Aztec era. Historians noticed details on the remains, suggesting they may have served an unusual purpose. Advertisement 3 Details on ancient human remains found in South Texas suggest a potential link to Aztec life (stock image) Credit: Getty 3 Carvings on the bones suggest they were used as musical instruments Credit: Wikimedia Commons/Gary Todd Archaeologists carried out an in-depth analysis of 29 prehistoric human bones discovered along the southern Texas coast. Unusual markings on the skeletal remains suggest they may have carried out a purpose beyond death. Unusual details Historians suggested that the group of hunter-gatherers who once inhabited the area likely created music by transforming the human bones into instruments. Dr. Matthew Taylor, who works as a biological anthropologist at Georgia's Augusta University, identified a musical rasp fashioned from a human humerus while studying the artefacts. Advertisement IFLScience reported that the item, which was part of a museum collection, resembled an omichicahuaztli, which is an instrument that was used by pre-Hispanic Mexican cultures, including the Aztecs. The remains date back to the Late Prehistoric era (AD 700-1500) in North America, according to an in-depth analayis published in the International Journal of Osteoarchaeology. "Late Prehistoric South Texas (1300-1528 AD) was characterised by hunter-gatherer habitation," Dr. Taylor wrote. "Forager peoples lived in the region from Paleoindian times up to and beyond European contact and never adopted agriculture." Advertisement He added that inhabitants of southern Texas and the associated Gulf Coast "have been historically documented since AD 1528". The analysis of the 29 bones found that 27 were made from either the arm or the leg. 'Once in a century' Pompeii discovery as ancient luxury SPA is saved from ashes with thermal baths & stunning mosaic Meanwhile, the remaining two objects were constructed from rib bones. According to archaeologists, the instruments were typically crafted using what's known as the "groove-and-snap" method. Advertisement This involves sawing a groove around a bone's circumference before breaking it in half. "This process is labour intensive and represents hours of work," Dr. Taylor wrote. He emphasised the meticulous manual effort behind crafting these skeletal artifacts. Potential links Historical objects fashioned from human bone are often thought to signify practices like honouring ancestors or displaying war trophies. Advertisement However, Dr. Taylor pointed out that such interpretations don't align with other archaeological findings from the region. The musical rasp made from an upper arm bone featured 29 carefully carved notches and decorative geometric patterns. One of the most intriguing discoveries, this instrument appeared to have been played by scraping another object along the grooves. While unique to South Texas, similar instruments are well-documented in central Mexican histories. Advertisement Typically carved from human thigh bones, these objects are decorated with comparable designs. Dr. Taylor speculated the Texan rasp "may represent an emulation of Mexican religious practices." He pointed to a possible contact or influence between Indigenous tribes occupying the South Texas coast and the Aztec empire. "Whatever their original provenance, it is quite apparent that the Late Prehistoric inhabitants did not regard the handling of human remains as taboo," he concluded. Advertisement "Although some may wish to equate the presence of these artefacts with the existence of cannibalism, this report does not support or refute that hypothesis." More on archaeology The remains of a lost Roman city have been uncovered on a popular holiday island. And the lost tomb of a 1,700-year-old king was uncovered in Mayan temple. Plus, the eerie "hybrid" skull that belonged to a "half human, half neanderthal girl". Advertisement An ancient lost city from 3,500-years-ago that played home to the oldest civilization in the Americas' was uncovered in Peru. And AI has deciphered a hymn on a 4,000-year-old clay tablet, which is said unlock the mystery of the ancient city of Babylon.

Nepo-baby with TV star dad poses on the red carpet with co-star in new Alien show – can you guess her famous parent?
Nepo-baby with TV star dad poses on the red carpet with co-star in new Alien show – can you guess her famous parent?

The Irish Sun

time3 days ago

  • The Irish Sun

Nepo-baby with TV star dad poses on the red carpet with co-star in new Alien show – can you guess her famous parent?

A NEPO-baby with a TV star dad posed on the red carpet with her co-star - but can you work out her famous parent? Alien: Earth serves as a prequel to the iconic 1979 movie Alien, starring Sigourney Weaver. 4 The cast of Alien: Earth posed on the red carpet Credit: Getty 4 Lead actress Sydney plays character Wendy - but do you know her famous real-life parent? Credit: Splash 4 Her dad is the Emmy-winning actor Kyle Chandler Credit: AFP The series is set to release on FX and FX on Hulu from August 12. Lead character Wendy is the first-ever hybrid - meaning someone whose human consciousness is transferred into a synthetic body. Rising actress Sydney Chandler, 29, portrays this pivotal role in Alien: Earth . If her surname sounds familiar, you'd be right, as her dad is famed actor Kyle Chandler. Read more on Nepo Babies Kyle, 59, is well-known to audiences for his role in NBC sports drama Friday Night Lights. In 2011, he won the Emmy for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series for his portrayal of Eric Taylor. Viewers may also recognise Kyle from Grey's Anatomy, or films such as King Kong and Super 8. Joining Sydney in Alien: Earth are the likes of Alex Lawther, Timothy Olyphant and Adrian Edmondson, among others. Most read in Celebrity She has previously appeared in the television series Pistol, playing singer Chrissy Hynde of The Pretenders. Sydney also appeared opposite Colin Farrell in the neo-noir mystery dama Sugar. Nepo-baby with TV star dad poses on the red carpet with co-star in new Alien movie - can you guess her famous parent? In 2022, Sydney portrayed Violet in psychological thriller film Don't Worry Darling. The cast also included Florence Pugh, Harry Styles, Chris Pine and Meanwhile, Sydney Nakoa-Wolf will star as one of the twins born to Timothée Chalamet's character Paul Atreides and This nepo-baby will make his big screen debut as Leto II. In the flick, his on-screen sister, Ghanima, will be played by Ida Brooke. Nakoa-Wolf's mother and father in the real world are known for their acting abilities, too. His parents are none other than Jason Mamoa and Lisa Bonet. 4 Sydney posed with her Alien: Earth co-star Alex Lawther Credit: Getty

Climate scientists accuse US energy department of twisting their work in new report
Climate scientists accuse US energy department of twisting their work in new report

The Journal

time4 days ago

  • The Journal

Climate scientists accuse US energy department of twisting their work in new report

CLIMATE SCIENTISTS WHOSE research has been cited in a report by the US Department of Energy have said their work was misused by the report in its efforts to try to downplay the role of human activity in global warming. The document outlines the Trump administration's rationale for revoking a foundational scientific ruling had underpinned the government's authority to combat climate change. The report contains inaccurate citations, flawed analysis and editorial errors throughout. It was written by a working group including John Christy and Judith Curry, who have both in the past been linked to The Heartland Institute, an advocacy group that frequently refutes the scientific consensus on climate change. It 'completely misrepresents my work,' said Benjamin Santer, atmospheric scientist and honorary professor in the School of Environmental Sciences at the University of East Anglia in the UK. Advertisement Santer said a section of the report on 'stratospheric cooling' contradicted his findings while citing his research on climate 'fingerprinting,' a scientific method that seeks to separate human and natural climate change, as evidence for its analysis. 'I am concerned that a government agency has published a report, which is intended to inform the public and guide policy, without undergoing a rigorous peer‑review process, while misinterpreting many studies that have been peer‑reviewed,' Bor-Ting Jong, an assistant professor at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam in the Netherlands, told AFP. Jong said the paper made false statements about the climate model her team examined and used different terminology that led to a flawed analysis of her findings. On Bluesky, the budding social media platform favored by academics, other researchers in atmospheric and extreme weather fields also deplored that the DoE document cherry-picked data and omitted or plainly distorted their academic findings. James Rae, a climate researcher at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, who said his work is also misrepresented in the report, told AFP the shift in how the department uses scientific research 'is really chilling.' 'DoE was at the forefront of science for decades. Whereas this report reads like an undergraduate exercise in misrepresenting climate science,' he said. This is not the first time since Donald Trump took office in January that scientists have said a government agency has misrepresented academic work to defend its policies. Related Reads Fracked gas could enter Ireland's energy supplies in new deal Countries causing climate crisis could be ordered to pay reparations to victims Previous instances included made up citations in the government's 'Make America Healthy Again' report, which the administration then rushed to edit. A department spokesperson said the new report was reviewed internally by a group of scientific researchers and policy experts from the Office of Science and National Labs. The public in the US will now have the opportunity to comment on the document before it is finalized for the Federal Register. 'The Climate Working Group and the Energy Department look forward to engaging with substantive comments following the conclusion of the 30-day comment period,' the department said. © AFP 2025

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store