![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/80db923dfd6e27fb27dcc49280a58eacee6c5eb30fff0ccd60d3b67be6155e4c/ezgif-1-798bb3eb74a8.gif)
Above ––
A rare and endangered species, the Mongolian wild horse, most commonly known as Przewalski's horse, was reintroduced into the Chernobyl Exclusion zone in 1998. The population has grown from a few dozen to an estimated two hundred. Here, around 20 horses are grazing in a meadow inside the exclusion zone. Original video by Elise Hunchuck (2018).
Chernobyl after Chernobyl
Landscapes of Post-History
Something from the future is peeking out and it’s just too big for our minds.
Too huge for us to handle.
—Svetlana Alexievich [1]
Coming soon.
Notes
1. From Svetlana Alexievich’s Chernoby Prayer: A Chronicle of the Future, translated by Anna Gunin and Arch Tait, translation published in 2016 bu Penguin Books (London).
![](https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/afa22554f5ba20967d5fd44472aef79397ab5eff7464b1b5c49d72448b341ab4/Screen-Shot-2019-02-12-at-02.25.48.png)
All photographs taken by Elise Hunchuck (c. 2018).
For reproduction or use elsewhere, please contact elisehunchuck [at] gmail [dot] com