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Radioactive wasps found at South Carolina nuclear facility

Radioactive wasps found at South Carolina nuclear facility
EYEWITNESS NEWS. NEW ON WYFF NEWS FOUR TODAY. NOW WE’VE SEEN EVERYTHING. A RADIOACTIVE WASP’S NEST WAS DISCOVERED IN SOUTH CAROLINA. ACCORDING TO A REPORT FROM THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY ON JULY 3RD, CREWS FOUND THE NEST AT THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE NUCLEAR FACILITY IN AIKEN. OFFICIALS SAY THE HIVE WAS SPRAYED TO KILL THE WASPS, AND LATER PROBES REVEALED THE NEST HAD A MODERATELY HIGH LEVEL OF RADIATION AT 100,000 GPM. THAT WASP NEST IS CONSIDERED ON SITE RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION, AND IT’S NOT RELATED TO A LOSS OF CONTAMINATION CONTROL. LEGACY. RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION IS LINGERING. RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION RESULTING FROM PAST ACTIVITIES. DOE DID NOT LIST ANY OTHER CAUSE FOR THE INSECT’S CONTAMINATION, AND AT THIS TIME, SOME GOOD NEWS. TH
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Updated: 10:58 AM CDT Jul 30, 2025
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Radioactive wasps found at South Carolina nuclear facility
WYFF 4 logo
Updated: 10:58 AM CDT Jul 30, 2025
Editorial Standards
Radioactive wasps, yes, you read that right, were found at a nuclear facility in South Carolina.According to a report from the U.S. Department of Energy, just before 2 p.m. on July 3, Radiological Control Operations discovered a wasp nest on a post near a tank at the Savannah River Site in Aiken.Officials said the nest was sprayed to kill the wasps. The nest was probed and discovered to be 100,000 dpm, which is a moderately high level of radiation.The wasp nest is considered "onsite legacy radioactive contamination" and not related to a loss of contamination control. Legacy radioactive contamination is lingering radioactive contamination resulting from past activities. The Department of Energy did not list any other cause for the insect's contamination.After the wasps were killed, they were bagged as radiological waste.Officials said the ground and surrounding area did not have any contamination.The incident did not cause any impact to other activities and operations at the facility.About the FacilityThe now 310-square-mile site was built in the 1950s to produce the basic materials used in the fabrication of nuclear weapons, primarily tritium and plutonium 239, during the Cold War.Cleanup and environmental remediation began in the 1980s after it became an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Superfund site.

Radioactive wasps, yes, you read that right, were found at a nuclear facility in South Carolina.

According to a report from the , just before 2 p.m. on July 3, Radiological Control Operations discovered a wasp nest on a post near a tank at the Savannah River Site in Aiken.

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Officials said the nest was sprayed to kill the wasps. The nest was probed and discovered to be 100,000 dpm, which is a moderately high level of radiation.

The wasp nest is considered "onsite legacy radioactive contamination" and not related to a loss of contamination control. Legacy radioactive contamination is lingering radioactive contamination resulting from past activities. The Department of Energy did not list any other cause for the insect's contamination.

After the wasps were killed, they were bagged as radiological waste.

Officials said the ground and surrounding area did not have any contamination.

The incident did not cause any impact to other activities and operations at the facility.

About the Facility

The now 310-square-mile site was built in the 1950s to produce the basic materials used in the fabrication of nuclear weapons, primarily tritium and plutonium 239, during the Cold War.

nuclear facility
Savannah River Site

Cleanup and environmental remediation began in the 1980s after it became an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Superfund site.