Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1739235 | Journal of Environmental Radioactivity | 2008 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The anthropogenic bomb fallout nuclides 137Cs and plutonium isotopes (240Pu, 239Pu) are important chronometers for the determination of recent sediment accumulation rates using sediment cores collected from various water bodies. One of the crucial time horizons used to date sediment core profiles corresponds to the date of first detection of these nuclides. Although atmospheric nuclear testing began during the mid-1940s, the year corresponding to a nuclide's first detection when measured in 2006 depends on a number of factors including fallout history, radioactive half-life, gamma/alpha detection limits, geographic latitude and the accumulated thickness of the sediment section. This paper reports estimations of the year of first detection in sediment profiles of fallout 137Cs and Pu measured by gamma and alpha spectrometry, respectively. We find that for the latitude 30-40° south of the equator the year of first detection for 137Cs is 1955. The date is earlier in the northern hemisphere due to higher fallout rates. Due to better measurement sensitivity first detection of Pu is generally earlier than 137Cs by 1-2 years.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Nuclear Energy and Engineering
Authors
C. Leslie, G.J. Hancock,