Techa


The Techa is a river on the eastern flank of the southern Ural Mountains noted for its nuclear contamination. It is long, and its basin covers. It begins at the formerly secret nuclear-processing town of Ozyorsk about northwest of Chelyabinsk and flows northeast to Dalmatovo on the Iset, a tributary of the Tobol. Its basin is enclosed on the southeast by that of the Miass, another river that flows northeast into the Iset.

Water pollution

From 1949 to 1956 the Mayak complex dumped an estimated of radioactive waste water into the Techa River, a cumulative dispersal of of radioactivity.
As many as forty villages, with a combined population of about 28,000 residents, lined the river at the time. For 24 of them, the Techa was a major source of water; 23 of them were eventually evacuated. In the past 45 years, about half a million people in the region have been irradiated in one or more of the incidents, exposing them to as much as 20 times the radiation suffered by the Chernobyl disaster victims.