Publications by authors named "K Bunzl"

The transfer factor (TF) of radiocaesium from soil-to-Swiss chard (Beta vulgaris var. cicla L.) was studied in two different characteristic allophanic soils (umbric andosol and dystric fluvisol) of the Lake Region, an important agricultural region situated in central-south Chile.

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The spatial distribution and vertical migration of global fallout (137)Cs were studied in soils from South Patagonia at the austral region of South America in semi-natural and natural environments located between 50-54 degrees S and 68-74 degrees W. The (137)Cs areal activity density varied from 222 to 858 Bq m(-2), and was found to be significantly positively correlated (p<0.001) with the mean annual precipitation rate.

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To improve the knowledge about the (137)Cs spatial distribution and vertical migration in soils of the Southern Hemisphere, the total areal activity density and the vertical transport parameters of this radionuclide were measured in an Antarctic region. For this purpose vegetation and incremental soil samples were collected at 21 representative sites located at 4 islands of the South Shetland Archipelago: King George, Robert, Greenwich and Snow (62-63 degrees S and 58-62 degrees W). The total (137)Cs activity density varied considerably from 118 to 662 Bq m(-2) (median 384 Bq m(-2), reference date 1995), with a high percentage of the total activity retained in the vegetation cover (5-98% in moss, 3-20% in lichen and 4-12% in grass).

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It is well known that bioturbation can contribute significantly to the vertical transport of fallout radionuclides in grassland soils. To examine this effect also for a forest soil, activity-depth profiles of Chernobyl-derived 134Cs from a limed plot (soil, hapludalf under spruce) with a high abundance of earthworms (Lumbricus rubellus) in the Olu horizon (thickness=3.5 cm) were evaluated and compared with the corresponding depth profiles from an adjacent control plot.

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In the near future, the use of 137Cs from global fallout (Cs) as a tracer for erosion studies will no longer be possible in areas with a substantial deposition of Chernobyl-derived 137Cs. Therefore, we have used (239+240)Pu from global fallout (Pu) as a tracer as well as 137Cs in order to determine long-term soil redistribution rates for an agricultural field (inclination about 20%, area approx. 3 ha) in Scheyern, Bavaria.

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