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The Chernobyl accident occurred in 1986, several years before the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War.
Reconstruction did not occur during the Civil War. Reconstruction was after the terrible destruction of the war. And reconstruction was not entirely successful, despite what that chapter in the history book tells you. Reconstruction first started with lincolns plan. It failed. Congress then tried a plan, but Lincoln pocket vetoed it. Johnston then tried a plan, but failed, then congress came up with a new plan and suceeded.
1946
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Hunley
August 6 and 9 1945
you have to be joking, right. ww2
The Hiroshima bomb detonated at 8.15am, 6th August, 1945 The Nagasaki bomb detonated at 11.02 am, 9th August 1945 We know the exact times of this because timepieces were found, frozen at the time the bomb hit.
Because man entered the atomic age in August of 1945, when nuclear weapons destroyed two cities in Japan (Hiroshima and Nagasaki).
8:15am
Nope
August 6 1945.
Military campaigns are secret by their very nature. Bombings over the Japanese mainland were always secret (as were bombings by the Japanese and German militaries) for risk of having bombers shot down. It is likely that some Japanese completely dismissed these leaflets. However, the Japanese government repeatedly lied to its citizens telling them that no bombings could occur (although Japan was being bombed at that point) and that no cities would be destroyed despite the fact that Japan was warned of a new and powerful device that would level cities. This was far more warning than any other people received prior to an attack such as the allied bombing of Dresden, Germany; the unprovoked Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor in the US; and the month-long massacre of more than 400,000 Chinese residents of Nanking by Japanese soldiers. Maybe once: The leaflet mentioned below was (by some accounts) dropped on Hiroshima. However of the many versions of the leaflet which mention 33 imperiled Japanese cities, none ever mention Nagasaki, Hiroshima, or Kokura. So perhaps Japanese citizens in Hiroshima et.al. felt that the other cities were going to be bombed but that Hiroshima was not. On August 1, 1945, five days before the bombing of Hiroshima, the U.S. Army Air Force dropped five million leaflets over Hiroshima, Nagasaki, and 33 other Japanese cities warning that those cities were going to be destroyed within a few days and advising the residents to leave to save their lives. One side of the leaflet had a photo of five U.S. bombers unloading bombs and a list of the targeted cities. The other side had the text.
Fires anywhere can cause death and destruction.
When the atomic bombs were dropped over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, people receive two doses of radiation: one during the explosion, and another from fallout. Experts say that approximately 50% of humans exposed to 450 rems will die, and 800 rems will kill virtually anyone. Death is inevitable and will occur from between two days to a couple of weeks. The first dose in the explosion had much rem and killed everyone instantly, so much that some people just evaporated. The second dose killed people within weeks. We can calculate and estimate but no measurement would survive in the ground so we actually don't have the exact number.
As of August 2013, there are no predictions of major destruction in America soon. This could potentially occur through civil unrest, war, or an impact with an asteroid.
Development can lead to environmental destruction if not managed sustainably. This can occur through deforestation, habitat destruction, pollution, and overexploitation of natural resources. Balancing development with environmental conservation is crucial to ensure long-term sustainability.