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Mathia Kreuzeder, a West German farmer, uses a Geiger counter to measure levels of radioactivity in the manure produced by his herd of 40 cows. Farmers throughout Europe have been checking radioactivity since the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, near Kiev, in the Soviet Union in April last year.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19870221.2.100

Bibliographic details

Press, 21 February 1987, Page 12

Word Count
51

Mathia Kreuzeder, a West German farmer, uses a Geiger counter to measure levels of radioactivity in the manure produced by his herd of 40 cows. Farmers throughout Europe have been checking radioactivity since the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, near Kiev, in the Soviet Union in April last year. Press, 21 February 1987, Page 12

Mathia Kreuzeder, a West German farmer, uses a Geiger counter to measure levels of radioactivity in the manure produced by his herd of 40 cows. Farmers throughout Europe have been checking radioactivity since the accident at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant, near Kiev, in the Soviet Union in April last year. Press, 21 February 1987, Page 12