Tracing of Plutonium Contamination over Inundated Areas of Camargue (France).

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01/09/2000

Céline Duffa, Philippe Renaud, Didier Louvat Goldschmidt 2000, 3-8 Septembre 2000, Oxford, UK proceedings volume 5(2), 363.

Type de document > *Congrès/colloque
Mots clés publication scientifique > radioécologie continentale (terrestre et eau douce) , contamination , inondation , plutonium
Unité de recherche > IRSN/DEI/SESURE/LERCM
Auteurs > DUFFA Céline , RENAUD Philippe

Alpha emitting 238, 239 and 240 plutonium isotopes were dispersed in the atmosphere all over the world since the first nuclear atmospheric tests in 1945. A large amount of 238Pu was added to the global amount of plutonium in the Northern Hemisphere in 1964. When a satellite equipped with a Pu-powered unit burnt-up in the atmosphere. Until 1980, the atmospheric contamination led to an homogeneous deposit over French territory plains soils that now contain ultra trace quantities of these long-lived plutonium isotopes, characterised by a 218Pu/239+240Pu activity ratio of 0.03 (UNSCEAR. 1982) During October 1993 and January 1994, two exceptional rises in the Rhone River water level induced large inundation of the North East of the Camargue. This area is situated 60 km downstream from the Marcoule reprocessing plant that has generated liquid release into this river since the beginning of the 60’s. This release contained different artificial radionuclides, and especially 238, 239 and 240 plutonium isotopes with 238Pu/239+240Pu activity ratio of 0.3. Below Marcoule installation, scavenging and sediment transport processes are governing plutonium fluxes in the Rhone River, and these particles are characterised by an activity ratio 238Pu/239+240Pu equivalent to Marcoule release’s. In this study 238Pu/239+240Pu activity ratio of some flooded soils are measured as it reflects the mixing between the two possible sources, Marcoule industrial plant release and the global fallout, During inundation, an input of 391,000 tons of Rhone sediments on Camargue soils occurred as 9 levees have broken (Pont, 1994). As the mass activity of 238Pu and 239+240Pu has been measured in lower Rhone sediments before the inundation, one can calculate the total brought activity to be 104MBq and 375MBq for 238Pu and 239+240Pu respectively. However, the dispatch of sediments over all the 130 squared kilometres flooded area was very inhomogeneous. One can postulate that the main sediment deposit occurred near the main levee breaches, but the finest sediment fraction could have migrated further. To check this hypothesis, we sampled fourteen cultivated soils 20 cm deep, from which seven were sampled all over the inundated area in order to investigate the contamination dispersion at the global scale. The other seven samples are devoted to the particular study of the Rhone sediment deposition near one of the main levee breaches. From obtained activity results, we use the mixing equation between the two different activity ratio to calculate the portion of 238Pu and 239+240Pu originating from the Rhone inputs. Some samples give Pu surface activities significantly higher than global fallout mean deposit. More than half of their 238Pu total activity is attributable to Rhone inputs. The part that Rhone sediments represent in sampled soils is also estimated. This portion is very different depending of the sample location, and can vary from 0 to 10 %, which corresponds to a Rhone sediment deposit thickness from 0 to 2 cm assuming a 20 cm uniform ploughing of soils. This study leads to a modelling of Pu distribution over the inundated area, showing that the Pu addition was very heterogeneous and was mainly concentrated straight from and near the levee main breac