Neha Patil (Editor)

Kyshtym

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Country
  
Russia

Administratively subordinated to
  
Town of Kyshtym

Urban okrug
  
Kyshtymsky Urban Okrug

Area
  
45.67 km²

Federal subject
  
Chelyabinsk Oblast

Administrative center of
  
Town of Kyshtym

Administrative center of
  
Kyshtymsky Urban Okrug

Local time
  
Sunday 9:12 PM

Kyshtym wwwparksandlandscapesorgblogwpcontentgallery

Weather
  
-7°C, Wind S at 14 km/h, 59% Humidity

Kyshtym deadlier than chernobyl 10 curiosities and interesting facts


Kyshtym (Russian: Кышты́м) is a town in Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, located on the eastern slopes of the Southern Ural Mountains 90 kilometers (56 mi) northwest of Chelyabinsk, near the town of Ozyorsk. Population: 38,942 (2010 Census); 41,929 (2002 Census); 42,852 (1989 Census); 36,000 (1970).

Contents

Map of Kyshtym, Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia

Kyshtym disaster september 29 1957


History

It was established by the Demidovs in 1757 around two factories for production of cast iron and steel. It was granted town status in 1934.

In 1910, Herbert Hoover's company helped modernize the copper, iron and steel industry associated with Baron Mellor Zakomelsku's Kyshtim's estate. Copper production, using pyritic smelting, eventually reached 25,000,000 pounds a year. According to Hoover, a small iron industry had existed there "for one hundred and fifty years", which produced a secret process for generating sheet iron "unusually resistant to rust." The process "consisted of alternately heating the sheets and sweeping them when hot with a wet pine-bough. The effect was to create a coating of FeO4 which was rust-resistant."

Administrative and municipal status

Within the framework of administrative divisions, it is, together with twelve rural localities, incorporated as the Town of Kyshtym—an administrative unit with the status equal to that of the districts. As a municipal division, the Town of Kyshtym is incorporated as Kyshtymsky Urban Okrug.

Nuclear disaster

Kyshtym is near the Ozyorsk nuclear complex, also known as "Mayak" ("lighthouse" in Russian), where on September 29, 1957, a violent explosion involving dry nitrate and acetate salts in a waste tank containing highly radioactive waste, contaminated an area of more than 15,000 square kilometers (Ozyorsk was the town built around the Mayak combine, but it was a closed city, which was not marked on maps, thus making Kyshtym the nearest town to the location of the disaster). The explosion resulted from a failure of the cooling system of the tank.

There was a release of 740 PBq of fission products, approximately 10% of which was dispersed into the atmosphere. Cerium-144 and Zirconium-95 (both relatively short lived isotopes with a half life of 285 and 64 days respectively) made up 91% of the release. There was 1 PBq of Sr-90, and 13 TBq of Cs-137. The contaminated zone, called East Urals Radioactive Trace (EURT), measuring 300 x 50 km was contaminated by more than 4 kBq/m² of Sr-90. The global fallout of Sr-90 was about 2 kBq/m². An area measuring 17 km² was contaminated by about 100 MBq Sr-90/m².

There were 270,000 inhabitants of the area. Mass evacuation was carried out as the critical contamination resulted from Sr-90 with a half-life of 28.8 years. About 800 km² of land were taken out of use, and 82% of this area has now been taken into use again for forestry and farming. However, evacuation was limited to the nearest settlements leading to more than 1000 acknowledged victims. It was estimated in 1990 that at this time, around 10,000 people lived in areas where the level of ambient radiation was more than quadruple that of the average in Chernobyl's restricted area after 1986.

The Kyshtym accident was largely concealed by the Soviet government until 1980, when the Soviet biologist Zhores Medvedev revealed its existence.

References

Kyshtym Wikipedia