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Earth

The village in Transylvania sacrificed to toxic sludge

It's not just vampires and bats that make Transylvania eerie. The village of Geamana was abandoned as a dump for toxic waste from a nearby copper mine

By Rowan Hooper

10 June 2015

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(Image: Glyn Thomas)

TRANSYLVANIA. Roll the word around in your mouth and see what it conjures. Images of vampires, bats and howling wolves? You can now add a vast toxic swamp.

This is Geamana, Romania, an abandoned village in the Apuseni Mountains of Transylvania. The village was sacrificed for the sake of a nearby copper mine that needed somewhere to dump its tailings – the sludge left over after the valuable minerals have been separated from ore.

Some 400 families were relocated and the village was flooded. Now only a church tower peeks out from the swamp. The image is one of 111 selected for the . All the images will be on display at the Royal Geographical Society, London, from 22 June to 10 July; the winners will be announced on 25 June. The works will then tour venues across the UK.

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