Publications by authors named "Alessander S Carmo"

Santa Quitéria, a city in northeastern Brazil, faces significant challenges in ensuring the availability of potable water due to its semi-arid climate and limited water resources. This study investigates the radiological quality of surface waters commonly used by the population for drinking and by animals for hydration. Water samples were collected from six different locations over a 25-month period, and the concentrations of naturally occurring radionuclides were measured using spectrophotometric analysis, total alpha, and gross beta counting.

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In Santa Quitéria City, part of the population uses surface water for potation. These waters do not undergo any treatment before consumption. As the region has a deposit of uranium, assessing water quality becomes important.

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Uranium mining can cause environmental impacts on non-human biota around mine sites. Because of this, the reduction in non-human biota exposure becomes an important issue. Environmental radioprotection results from the evolution of human radioprotection; it is based on dose rate to non-human biota and uses, as a biological target, and has harmful effects on populations.

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Fish from a Funil dam reservoir associated with a Nuclear Fuel Factory were sampled aiming to assess the radiological risk due to ingestion. Funil dam reservoir is a strategic site, once it receives effluent from the industrial complex that performs isotopic enrichment of uranium and conversion of UF. The mean activity concentrations obtained for K, Ra, Ra and Th were 57.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Uranium mining negatively impacts local water bodies by releasing long-lasting radionuclides, prompting a study at three effluent release points (#014, #025, #076) from an old mine undergoing decommissioning.
  • - Water samples were analyzed for various radionuclides using techniques aligned with established safety criteria by the World Health Organization and Brazilian legislation, revealing different levels of contamination at each sampling location.
  • - Although radionuclide levels at the three sites were generally within safe limits for public use, point #076 exhibited chemical toxicity issues, indicating that water from this site should be restricted for safe use.
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The Ore Treatment Unit was a uranium mining company that is currently being decommissioned. The local rainfall index makes it necessary to release effluents into the environment. After releasing, the wastewater is available for unrestricted use.

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A mine in an area of naturally occurring radioactive materials (NORM), characterized by acid mine drainage, generates effluents with natural radionuclide concentrations, usually above the limits authorized by the regulator. The plant exploiting NORM controls the water quality and discharges it into the aquatic environment after meeting technical requirements. Downstream, water usage is unrestricted.

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The Ore Treatment Unit (in Portuguese Unidade de Tratamento de Minérios - UTM) located in Caldas, MG, Brazil is a disabled uranium mine. Environmental conditions generate acid drainage leaching metals and radionuclides from the waste rock pile. This drainage is treated to remove the heavy metals and radionuclides, before allowing the release of the effluent to the environment.

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