Popova, Nadezhda (14 August 2019). ""Кое-какеры" из Росатома" ["Something-doers" from Rosatom]. Moscow Post (in Russian). Archived from the original on 21 August 2019. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
"Взрыв в Нёноксе: факты и версии" [Nyonoksa explosion: facts and versions]. Belomorkanal (Russian: «Беломорканал») TV29.RU (The White Sea Channel) (in Russian). Severodvinsk. 2 September 2019. Retrieved 15 October 2019.
Popova, Nadezhda (14 August 2019). ""Кое-какеры" из Росатома" ["Something-doers" from Rosatom]. Moscow Post (in Russian). Archived from the original on 21 August 2019. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
On 27 December 2007, the Clinical Hospital No. 6 (Russian: Клиническая больница № 6) merged with the Institute of Biophysics of the FMBA of Russia (Russian: Институт биофизики ФМБА России) to become the SSC A. I. Burnazyan Federal Medical Biophysical Center (FMBC) which was named after Avetik Ignatevich Burnazyan (Russian: Аветик Игнатьевич Бурназян) and became the only Federal Medical Biophysical Center (FMBC) (Russian: ГНЦ Федеральный медицинский биофизический центр имени А. И. Бурназяна ФМБА России) that specializes in contaminated persons exposed to high levels of ionizing radiation from radiological incidents such as at Mayak and Chernobyl.[27] Burnazyan is the flagship Russian medical center for biophysics, radiation and nuclear medicine and safety.[28]
Verkhovka River (Russian: Река верховка) empties into Lake Nizhny (Russian: озеро Нижнее) which drains to the Nyonoksa River. The Nyonoksa River joins Lake Nizhny with the Dvina Bay of the White Sea.
"Замер радиации в Нёноксе" [Measurement of radiation in Nyonoksa]. Belomorkanal (Russian: «Беломорканал») TV29.RU (The White Sea Channel) (in Russian). Severodvinsk. 2 September 2019. Retrieved 15 October 2019.