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The oldest nuclear reactor in the world

The Oklo site is a natural nuclear reactor found. It’s basically a spot where 2 billion years ago things added up and made what was basically a natural nuclear reactor. Thankfully its long gone but it’s still crazy the earth actually created something it took us centuries to create ourselves.

Formation and operation
Fuel source: About two billion years ago, the Oklo region had a rich deposit of uranium ore with a high concentration of uranium-235, the isotope necessary for nuclear fission.
Moderator: Groundwater in the area acted as a moderator, slowing down the fast neutrons released during fission. This slowing down allowed the neutrons to collide with other uranium-235 atoms, creating a sustainable chain reaction.
Cyclical process: The reaction would heat the water, causing it to boil and turn to steam. With no water to act as a moderator, the reaction would stop. As the area cooled, groundwater would return, and the cycle of fission would begin again.
Discovery
Discovery in 1972: French scientists discovered the Oklo natural reactors in 1972 after noticing a lower-than-expected concentration of uranium-235 in samples from the Oklo mine.
Evidence of the reaction: The deficit of uranium-235 was proof that nuclear reactions had occurred, confirming theories that such natural reactors could exist.
Number of reactors: Scientists have identified 16 separate zones within the Oklo and adjacent Okelobondo uranium mines that were part of this natural nuclear phenomenon.
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ArishMell · 70-79, M
Nature took far longer than we ever did, to develop such things! Many hundreds or throusands of millions of years to our mere few decades.

The planet's internal heat source, keeping its Mantle "liquid", is nuclear fission. (The rock is above what its melting-point would be at the surface, but is under such pressure that it is no more than extremely viscous.)