137Cs in French soils: Deposition patterns and 15-year evolution

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25/01/2007

Titre de la revue : Science of the Total Environment Volume : 374 N° : 2-3 Pagination : 388-398 Date de publication : 25/01/2007

Type de document > *Article de revue
Mots clés publication scientifique > césium , dépôt , sol
Unité de recherche > IRSN/DEI/SESURE/LERCM
Auteurs > METIVIER Jean-Michel , RENAUD Philippe , ROUSSEL-DEBET Sylvie

Around 2000 surface samples have been taken from French soil at around twenty stations over the last fifteen years. Caesium 137, the only artificial radionuclide in the terrestrial environment currently detectable with gamma spectroscopy, was measured in the samples. The levels of caesium activity were compared to deposition estimates for deposits from atmospheric weapons tests and Chernobyl fallout. Since the start of data acquisition, specific activity in the samples has decreased with a mean effective half-life of between 8 and 11 y, for meadow soil and agricultural soil respectively. These field observations confirm that the conventional soil migration-retention model, which uses distribution coefficient Kd, is insufficient for modelling caesium distribution in the surface soil layer. Although the differences between sites tend to diminish with time, surface specific activity in agricultural and meadow soil varies on average from a few Bq to several tens of Bq per kg of dry matter.

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