1. On the distribution and inventories of radionuclides in dated sediments around the Swedish coast.
- Author
-
Olszewski G, Andersson P, Lindahl P, and Eriksson M
- Subjects
- Cesium Radioisotopes analysis, Radioactive Fallout analysis, Sweden, Geologic Sediments chemistry, Radiation Monitoring, Water Pollutants, Radioactive analysis
- Abstract
The activity concentrations and distribution of
137 Cs,238 Pu,239+240 Pu,241 Am, and210 Pb was determined by the analysis of six sediment cores from the Baltic Sea and Kattegat. The chronology of the sediment cores has been used to evaluate the origin and time trend of the radionuclide sources in these sediments. The sediment cores were dated with a210 Pb model and the results were validated with fallout peaks, assumed to originate from the global nuclear weapons testing and the Chernobyl accident. Source identification, using the isotopic and radionuclide activity ratios, showed that the Chernobyl accident is the main source of137 Cs in the Baltic Sea; for239+240 Pu and241 Am the dominant source was shown to be fallout from nuclear weapons tests. For238 Pu and241 Am the Chernobyl accident had a significant impact on the direct fallout into the Baltic Proper, with up to a 65% contribution in the sediment slices dated to 1986. In these sediment slices the maximum activity ratios of238 Pu/239+240 Pu and241 Am/239+240 Pu were 0.314 ± 0.008 and 1.29 ± 0.06, respectively. The ratios clearly deviate from the corresponding ratios for global nuclear weapons fallout (around 0.028 and 0.54, respectively). Calculated inventories were 63-175 Bq·m-2 for239+240 Pu, 2.8-7.8 for238 Pu Bq·m-2 and 0.92-44.4 kBq·m-2 for137 Cs. Different fallout patterns for137 Cs and plutonium isotopes from the Chernobyl accident were confirmed through depth profiles analyses. The maximum inventory of137 Cs was observed in the Bothnian Sea, while Chernobyl-derived plutonium was found to be mostly present in Northern Baltic Proper. The radionuclides distribution in the depth profiles shows how contaminated water affects the sediment as it passes sampling stations according to the current circulation pattern in the Baltic Sea. Additionally, the effect of increased activity concentrations from of river discharges in the most contaminated area in the Bothnian Sea was observed., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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