Breaking Chernobyl: "Incredible Abilities" via "Advanced Evolution" From Radiation
One of the most unusual and unsettling discoveries of recent decades is drawing attention again. On the walls of one of the most radioactive buildings in Chernobyl, scientists found a black fungus called Cladosporium sphaerospermum. Not only did it survive in the high-radiation environment, but it actually grew faster when exposed to radiation.
This was reported by the scientific portal Science Alert, referencing a series of studies on this unique phenomenon.
When people talk about Chernobyl, they usually imagine a dead zone: a destroyed reactor, abandoned towns, contaminated land, and decades of environmental disaster.
But almost unnoticed among the ruins and rusting concrete, a new form of life is developing.
Researchers conducted experiments and observed that when the fungus was exposed to higher levels of radiation, its biomass increased faster than under normal conditions.
In other words:
the more radiation there is, the faster it grows.
This contradicts much of what we assume …