Publications by authors named "Sylwia Blazej"

Article Synopsis
  • Glaciers act as secondary sources of pollutants, specifically radioisotopes like Cesium and Plutonium, which are found in higher concentrations compared to other environments.
  • This study explores various factors such as glacier altitude, surface area, and organic matter in cryoconite to understand their influence on the concentration of natural and human-made radionuclides in 19 Alpine glaciers.
  • Findings reveal that smaller glaciers have higher radioisotope concentrations due to cryoconite retaining pollutants during melting, indicating a potential increase in pollutant release into mountain ecosystems as many smaller glaciers are expected to vanish in the next 50 years.
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Contemporary melting glaciers are considered a secondary source of pollutants including radionuclides. Cryoconite - biogenic sediment on the glacier surface - exhibits high concentrations of natural and anthrophogenic radioisotopes. Understanding the interactions between radioisotopes and organisms is essential for evaluating their potential impact on glacier-related ecosystems.

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A low background gamma spectrometer with an Etruscan, 2500 years old lead shield and a muon veto detector were applied to study Na and Be activity concentration in ground level air aerosol samples collected weekly over the years 2003-2006 in Kraków. Each sample was formed with ca 100 000 m of passed air, collected with two parallel ASS-500 high volume air samplers. The results for K and Cs are also presented for reference and comparison.

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Fruiting bodies of fungi belonging to more than 70 species were collected within a few thousand square meter area of one forest during 2006 and 2007. The soil profile was collected to check the cumulative deposition of (137)Cs, which was relatively high, equal to 64 +/- 2 kBq/m(2) (calculated for October 2006). The majority of this activity was in the first 6 cm.

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The effect on electrophilic activity of substituents located para, ortho, and meta to the nitro group of nitrobenzenes was determined by using vicarious nucleophilic substitution of hydrogen (VNS) with the carbanion of chloromethyl phenyl sulfone (1) as the model process. Values for the relative activities of substituted nitroarenes are given relative to nitrobenzene, which was taken as the standard. This process was chosen as a model reaction because it meets key criteria, such as the wide range of substituents that can be present on the nitrobenzene ring, a low sensitivity to steric hindrance, and in particular the possibility of ensuring conditions in which the overall relative rates of reaction in competitive experiments are equal to the relative rates of nucleophilic addition.

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The relative rate constants for the vicarious nucleophilic substitution (VNS) of the anion of chloromethyl phenyl sulfone (1-) with a variety of nitroheteroarenes, for example, nitropyridines, nitropyrroles, nitroimidazoles, 2-nitrothiophene, and 4-nitropyrazole, have been determined by competition experiments. It was shown that nitropyridines are approximately four orders of magnitude more reactive than nitrobenzene. Among the five-membered heterocycles 2-nitrothiophene is the most active followed by nitroimidazoles and 4-nitropyrazole.

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Results are presented for (137)Cs, (90)Sr and plutonium activity concentrations in more than 20 samples of terrestrial invertebrates, including species of beetles, ants, spiders and millipedes, collected in the highly contaminated area of the Chernobyl exclusion zone. The majority of samples were collected in Belarus, with some also collected in the Ukraine. Three other samples were collected in an area of lower contamination.

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This paper reports results of gamma and alpha spectrometric measurements for mosses, lichens, fungi and soil samples from areas in the Balkans targeted by depleted uranium (DU). Samples were collected in 2002 and 2003 in the vicinity of several villages, principally Han Pijesak (Bosnia and Herzegovina, hit by DU in 1995) and Bratoselce (South Serbia, hit by DU in 1999) and in lesser numbers from Gornja Stubla, Kosovo (which is identified as a high natural radon/thoron area) and Presevo close to the Kosovo border. In the course of gamma spectrometric measurements some results suggested samples with unusual high uranium contents which might be considered to be a signature for the presence of DU, although many samples had very high detection limits.

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