move on to the next one. it s very thorough. you know, i see you have the mask on and we were just commenting, you can really smell the acrid sort of heavy metal smell in the air. how dangerous is that, do you think, and also for the other residents that live around here? obviously, the longer you re exposed to it, the danger increases. we have a hazmat team that s here. we do decontamination wherever we leave the pile or the scene. we get our boot decontaminated. we have radiation detectors and stuff like that. so our health is being monitored. the air quality is being importanted. we re all supposed to wear ppes. this goes back before the time of covid. we re all gowned up, gloved up here. here it s masks, eye protection, ear protection. do whatever we can to keep ourselves safe so we can do the job we have to do.
«В августе 2020 года мы победили — стали нацией — и эта мысль должна быть фундаментом»
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happened. the u.s. military had such a surplus of munitions, experts say they were simply dumped in the water from about 1946 to 1970. historians say people didn t think much about it back then because they were discarded in water so deep, it was thought they would never be disturbed. but, as we know, through the years humans have gone deeper and deeper in search of oil to put down utility cables and to fish. as more time passes, scientists say the danger increases. the containers can rust or degrade through time. even metal containers that you thought were totally impervious, enough time has gone by where things are starting to corrode and break apart. scarry, right? there is also a fear that there are devices like torpedos that actually become more unstable over time, so the risk of an accidental explosion is increasing, gretchen. one of these weapons that