Nature reclaims its space 40 years after the Chernobyl explosion: “It is a kind of small miracle”

Chernobyl, Ukraine – In contaminated lands too dangerous for human life, the wildest horses in the world roam freely.

On the other side of the Chernobyl exclusion zone, Przewalski’s stocky, sand-colored, almost toy-like horses graze in a radioactive landscape larger than Luxembourg.

On April 26, 1986, an explosion at the Ukrainian nuclear power plant sent radiation across Europe and forced the evacuation of entire cities, displacing tens of thousands of people. It was the worst nuclear disaster in history.

Four decades later, Chernobyl – which in Ukraine is transliterated as “Chornobyl” – is still too dangerous for humans. But the fauna has settled back in.

Wolves now prowl the vast no man’s land spanning Ukraine and Belarus, and brown bears have returned after more than a century. Populations of lynx, elk, red deer and even packs of loose dogs have recovered.