Title of article :
Radionuclide characterization and associated dose
from long-lived radionuclides in close-in fallout
delivered to the marine environment at Bikini and
Enewetak Atolls
Author/Authors :
William L. Robisona، نويسنده , , Victor E. Noshkinb، نويسنده , , U، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Abstract :
Between June 1946 and October 1958, Enewetak and Bikini Atolls were used by the US as testing grounds for 66
nuclear devices. The combined explosive yield from these tests was 107 million t million t TNT equivalents.. This
testing produced close-in fallout debris that was contaminated with quantities of radioactive fission and particle
activated products, and unspent radioactive nuclear fuel that entered the aquatic environment of the atolls. Today,
the sediments in the lagoons are reservoirs for tens of TBq of the transuranics and some long-lived fission and
activation products. The larger amounts of contamination are associated with fine and coarse sediment material
adjacent to the locations of the high yield explosions. Radionuclides are also distributed vertically in the sediment
column to various depths in all regions of the lagoons. Concentrations greater than fallout background levels are
found in filtered water sampled over several decades from all locations and depths in the lagoons. This is a direct
indication that the radionuclides are continuously mobilized to solution from the solid phases. Of particular
importance is the fact that the long-lived radionuclides are accumulated to different levels by indigenous aquatic
plants and organisms that are used as food by resident people. One might anticipate finding continuous high
contamination levels in many of the edible marine organisms from the lagoons, since the radionuclides associated
with the sediments are not contained and are available to the different organisms in a relatively shallow water
environment. This is not the case. We estimate that the radiological dose from consumption of the edible parts of
marine foods at Enewetak and Bikini is presently approximately 0.05% of the total 50-year integral effective dose
from all other exposure pathways that include ingestion of terrestrial foods and drinking water, external exposure and inhalation. The total radiological dose from the marine pathway is dominated by the natural radionuclides, 210Po
and 210Pb. Man-made radionuclides presently contribute -0.3% of the dose from these natural radionuclides in the
marine food chain and within approximately 90 years only 0.15%.
Keywords :
Marshall islands , radioactivity , dose assessment , marine environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment