Sarcophagus in a sentence as a noun

A newspaper tycoon commissioned a sarcophagus in the form of a huge owl.

A segway mounted sarcophagus would be more suitable.

Perhaps it would be easier/cheaper/prettier to cover the sarcophagus in the fungus than in more concrete?

>Sitting at the centre of the exclusion zone, the damaged >reactor unit is encased in a steel and cement sarcophagus.

Second, they had an open reactor in Chernobyl, so it was immediately clear that they need to build a sarcophagus.

Chernobylbug: the dangerous code is encased in a concrete sarcophagus and there's a 30km exclusion zone.

At Chernobyl the plant was effectively destroyed, so there was no harm in simply filling it with concrete and placing the sarcophagus over it.

However, it was already designed with containment that worked, and as a result, a sarcophagus wouldn't have changed anything.

In the office, surrounded by monochrome early DOS machines someone had set up an Amiga 1000 showing the golden sarcophagus of Tutankhamen.

In addition, dog is uniquely positioned for indoors explorations of inside of sarcophagus - not only it is super dusty, but it is much harder to fly the drone indoors.

Not heroes sacrificing their lives to save the humanity and sarcophagus build with international collaboration.

Consider that Ukraine can make some decent income off the tragedy of Chernobyl, given that they have an unusable sector of their territory relegated to the reactor sarcophagus.

Yeah, the sarcophagus is impossible to manage above ground, but what about digging underneath it and excavating a massive permanent waste repository, and charging money for depositing waste there?

Absolutely; hence "if Fukushima were Chernobyl".I don't mean to suggest that Japan should build a sarcophagus; I only mean to give an idea of the sort of timescale for significant engineering tasks that the Soviets were working with.

At the end there is this conclusion: Answering the question of why the nose is broken on any particular Egyptian statue, relief, or sarcophagus mostly depends on two key factors: the condition of the inscription, and the original location and purpose of the statue.

>Is this a real world problem with real world consequences?Might not be where you live, but there's a real world evacuated zone in Chernobyl, with a 20 mile radius were "even today radiation levels are so high that the workers responsible for rebuilding the sarcophagus are only allowed to work five hours a day for one month before taking 15 days of rest.

Sarcophagus definitions

noun

a stone coffin (usually bearing sculpture or inscriptions)