A proposed observatory in Nilgiri forests threatens to  disturb wildlife movement
  
 In early 2000, a team of scientists gathered at the Saha Institute  of Nuclear in Kolkata and decided to revive research on neutrinos, tiny  elemental particles that can pass through almost all matter unhindered. A flurry  of meetings followed culminating in a project called India-based Neutrino  Observatory (INO), touted as the biggest and most ambitious experiment on  particle physics in India. This has generated much enthusiasm among physicists,  for though neutrinos are one of the fundamental particles that make up the  universe, they are least understood. There are only a handful of observatories  in the world carrying out experiments on neutrinos. 
 Environmental activists and conservationists, however, are  apprehensive about the multi-crore-rupees project because it is proposed to come  up in the middle of the Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve (NBR), a 5,520 sq km of  contiguous protected forest at a tri-junction of Kerala, Karnataka and Tamil  Nadu. 
 They fear  constructing the observatory will disrupt elephant corridors and add more  population to the area, leading to its ecological degradation. A joint committee  of the Department of Atomic Energy and the Department of Science and Technology  handling the INO project, however, claims adequate measures will be taken to  protect the environment. 
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