Publications by authors named "Dmytrii Holiaka"

The aim of this study was to assess the exposures received by firefighters engaged in extinguishing the large-scale wildfires in the most contaminated areas of the Ukrainian part of the Chornobyl Exclusion Zone in 2016 and 2020. The assessments are based on measurements of radionuclide airborne concentrations in the breathing zones of workers and at the aerosol sampling stations of the automated radiation monitoring system operated by SSE Ecocenter. During the wildfires, the radionuclide airborne concentrations increased by orders of magnitude compared to the background levels, reaching maximum values in the firefighting area of 1.

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The trenches of the waste burial site in the Chornobyl Red Forest represent a big reservoir of radionuclides for the artificial plantation of Scots pine established in that area, but the long term dynamics of tree biomass contamination, especially with Sr, remains unclear. The present study was conducted between 2005 and 2018 on two groups of trees of the same age. The IN group is represented by trees growing on the trench containing highly radioactive contaminated fertile soil and organic matter, while the OUT group is located outside the trench.

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The extensive radioactive fallout resulting from the 1986 Chornobyl accident caused tree death near the nuclear power plant and perturbed trees communities throughout the whole Chornobyl exclusion zone. Thirty years into the post-accident period, the radiation continues to exert its fatal effects on the surviving trees. However, to what extent the continuous multi-decadal radiation exposure has affected the radial tree growth and its sensitivity to climate variation remains unascertained.

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Thirty-five years after the accident, large forest areas in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone still contain huge amounts of radionuclides released from the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Unit 4 in April 1986. An assessment of the radiological and radioecological consequences of persistent radioactive contamination and development of remediation strategies for Chernobyl forests imply acquiring comprehensive data on their contamination levels and dynamics of biomass inventories. The most accurate forest inventory data can be obtained in ground timber cruises.

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Possibility of the economical utilization of forests in the radioactive contaminated areas depends on compliance of the radionuclide activity concentrations in wood with the hygiene norms or national standards that are established by the governments or regulators. Since such regulations consider wood as a whole, development of the sampling methods for assessment of compliance of wood to the norms or standards requires the adequate addressing the issues related to heterogeneity of the radionuclide distributions within the tree trunks. In this paper we present spatial distributions of the Sr and Cs activity concentrations in the trunk wood of mature Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.

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