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Radioactive nuclear fuel rods at Savannah River National Laboratory. White cobweb-like material appears near top of some containers. Image: U.S. Department of Energy.

At the Savannah River National Laboratory in South Carolina, where, among other things, spent fuel rods from nuclear power reactors are stored, workers last fall reported a white substance, similar to cobwebs left by spiders, in one of the pools of water where the radioactive rods are kept.

"We observed it, it was unusual, it appears to be biological in nature but we don't know that for sure," said Will Callicott, the lab's manager of executive communications. "It doesn't seem to be doing any harm."

It has, though, prompted some blaring headlines in tabloids in the U.K.

It is certainly harmful in large doses, breaking down tissue and damaging DNA, but American scientists who studied the evacuated wasteland around the Soviet Chernobyl nuclear plant after the 1986 accident there said they got a surprise. At least 135,000 people were forced to move - but the area they abandoned became a haven for wildlife.

"'Mutant' spider fears at nuclear waste lab," said The Sun.

"Could Spider-Man become a reality?" asked the Daily Mail.

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never saw a spider make cob webs under water.... that's just some type of formation caused by minerals in the water usually, they found stuff like this decades ago also this isn't the first time... talk about sensationalism around nuclear stuff

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