Title of article :
Prediction of spatial variation in global fallout
of 137Cs using precipitation
Author/Authors :
S.E. Palsson، نويسنده , , ?، نويسنده , , B.J Howard، نويسنده , , S.M. Wright، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
هفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
Deposition from atmospheric nuclear weapons tests (termed global fallout) has been shown to be proportional to the rate of
precipitation. Here we describe methods for using precipitation and radionuclide deposition information for a reference site to
estimate global fallout at other locations. These methods have been used to estimate global fallout in Iceland, identified during the
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) by Wright et al. [Wright, S.M., Howard, B.J., Strand, P., Nylén, T., Sickel,
M.A.K., 1999. Prediction of 137Cs deposition from atmospheric nuclear weapons tests within the Arctic. Environ Pollut 104, 131–
143.] as one of the Arctic areas which received the highest global fallout, but where measurements of contamination were sparse,
and difficult to obtain due to the remote and inaccessible terrain of much of the country. Measurements of global fallout 137Cs
deposition have been made in Iceland at sites close to meteorological stations to ensure that precipitation data were of high quality.
The AMAP modeling approach, based on measured precipitation and radionuclide deposition data, was applied using a reference
monitoring station located close to Reykjavik. The availability of good precipitation data and locally based estimates of time
dependent ratios of 137Cs deposition to precipitation during the fallout period gave a better correlation between predicted and
measured 137Cs global fallout (r2=0.96) than that achieved using the much more heterogeneous set of data collected by AMAP
over the whole of the Arctic. Having obtained satisfactory results with the model for a number of calibration sites alongside
meteorological stations we then produced a map of estimated 137Cs deposition based on a model of estimated precipitation. This
deposition map was then successfully validated (r2=0.85) for sites where 137Cs deposition was measured; the associated
uncertainty in predictions was also estimated.
Keywords :
deposition , Deposition estimates , Deposition density , Radiocaesium , Global fallout , precipitation
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment
Journal title :
Science of the Total Environment