THIS IS JUST ONE OF 15 UNBELIEVABLE FACTS ABOUT RUSSIA. WHEN THE SOVIET UNION COLLAPSED FOR EXAMPLE YOU COULD LIGHT MANY RIVERS AND STREAMS ON FIRE OR GATHER THE KEROSENE TO USE IN YOUR LAMPS AT THAT TIME IN RUSSIA.
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15 Unbelievable Facts About Russia
Just standing on the edge of Russia's Lake Karachay for an hour only will give you enough radiation to kill you. (We're not even talking about putting your toes in the water.)
Radioactive waste was dumped into Lake Karachay during the Soviet Union, including long-lived fission products such as Strontium-90 and Cesium-137.
The area around the lake (the Chelyabinsk region) had seen a 21% increase in cancer, a 25% increase in birth defects, and a 41% increase in leukemia.
The nearby Techa River was so contaminated that roughly 65% of locals got radiation sickness.
Source: Daily Mail
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/more-crazy-facts-about-russia-2015-1?op=1#ixzz3OqKl93f1
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15 Unbelievable Facts About Russia
Everyone's heard a thing or two about Putin and the USSR.
But few people have heard anecdotes about real life in Russia and the former Soviet Union.
So Business Insider put together a list of stranger-than-fiction facts about Soviet pop stars, military classes in high schools, a lake that could kill you.
And that's just the beginning.
In the Soviet Union, high-school students had to learn how to assemble and take apart an AK-47 to graduate.
There was a course in school called "начальная военная подготовка" (beginning military training), in which students had to learn how to assemble and take apart an AK-47 under a time limit.
Students also learned how to shoot a rifle and march, several people who attended high school under the Soviet Union told Business Insider.
This was a graduation requirement.
You can go see Vladimir Lenin's actual body today. For real.
You can go check out Lenin's embalmed body from the hours of 10 a.m to 1 p.m. in the Lenin Mausoleum in the Red Square.
(Except on Mondays and Fridays, sorry.)
His body has been on display for 90 years at this point, since 1924.
Source: Moscow.info
A female Russian politician proposed that "each female citizen of Russia will be able to receive by mail the genetic material of the President" to have a baby.
Chairwoman of Parliamentary Commission on Women's Affairs, Children and Family Yelena Borisovna Mizoulina reportedly said:
"The essence of my proposition is simple. Each female citizen of Russia will be able to receive by mail the genetic material of the President, get pregnant from him and have a baby. These mothers will be receiving special allowances from the government."
Source: Trust (Russian), New York Observer(English)
There are North Korean labor camps in Siberia.
North Korea outsources its labor force to work in Siberia in an effort to generate hard currency.
Vice News went to visit the camps and discovered that workers had 10-year labor contracts, "Dickensian working conditions, squalid living quarters, inedible food and the majority of their wages garnished and sent back to North Korea."
Source: VICE NEWS
Russia has a bigger surface area than Pluto.
Pluto's surface area is 16.7 square kilometers.
Russia's surface area is 17,098,242 sq km.
Source: CIA Factbook
Russians drink two times as many shots as Americans per week, but South Koreans drink two times as many as Russians.
Russia's natural gas reserves are equal to 19.2 billion Olympic sized swimming pools.
Russia has 1,688 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves.
And Olympic-size swimming pool has a volume of 88,000 cubic feet.
Source: EIA
The "Tetris Song" is a 19th-century Russian folk song.
"Tetris" was invented by Alexey Pajitnov during the Soviet Union.
The "Tetris Song" is a 19th-century folk song called "Korobeiniki."
Source: CNBC
Bangladesh has 23 million more people than Russia, but it is 0.84% of Russia's size.
Bangladesh's population is 166,280,712 and its total size is 143,998 sq km.
Russia's population is 142,470,272 and its total size is 17,098,242 sq km.
Source: CIA Factbook
A Russian senator proposed creating a Russia-only internet, and naming it after a popular cartoon character, Cheburashka.
A Russian senator, Maxim Kavdzharadze, proposed creating a domestic internet (mostly for "scientific information") because Russia needs to "get out from under the wing of the US, otherwise information leaks will continue."
He suggested that other countries (Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan) could have access.
Additionally, Russia's Presidential Library announced in November that it was working with Russia's National Library to develop an online encyclopedia as an alternative to Wikipedia.
Source: The Moscow Times
Just standing on the edge of Russia's Lake Karachay for an hour only will give you enough radiation to kill you. (We're not even talking about putting your toes in the water.)
Radioactive waste was dumped into Lake Karachay during the Soviet Union, including long-lived fission products such as Strontium-90 and Cesium-137.
The area around the lake (the Chelyabinsk region) had seen a 21% increase in cancer, a 25% increase in birth defects, and a 41% increase in leukemia.
The nearby Techa River was so contaminated that roughly 65% of locals got radiation sickness.
Source: Daily Mail
Technically speaking, there is less than 2.5 miles' distance between Russia and the US.
Russia and Alaska are divided by the Bering Straight, which is 55 miles at its narrowest point.
However, in between the strait, there are two small islands, the Big Diomede, on Russian territory, and the Little Diomede, on US territory.
The two islands are slightly less than 2.5 miles apart.
Source: Slate
The metal frame of the Statue of Liberty was made in Yekaterinburg.
Pretty much everyone knows that the Statue of Liberty was a gift from France to the US.
But what you might not know is that the frame was made of metal produced in Yekaterinburg.
Source: Russia Beyond The Headlines
Soviet women were granted the right to vote before American women were.
Women were granted universal suffrage in1917 after the Russian Czar was dethroned, while American women were granted the right to vote in 1920.
Source: National Archives
Traditionally, Russians don't give an even number of flowers to one another. That's reserved for funerals.
So stay clear of giving a dozen roses to superstitious people.
Can't get enough about Russia? You're in luck. There's more:
30 Crazy Things You Didn't Know About Russia>
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