Radionuclides produced by 20th-century human nuclear activities from 1945 (e.g., atmospheric nuclear explosions and nuclear-fuel reprocessing) made significant impacts on earth's surface environments. Long-lived shallow-water corals living in tropical/subtropical seas incorporate the anthropogenically-produced radionuclides, including I and C, into their skeletons, and provide time series records of the impacts of nuclear activities. Here, we present I/I and ΔC time series records of an annually-banded modern coral skeleton from Rowley Shoals, off the northwestern coast of Australia, in the far eastern Indian Ocean. The I/I and ΔC records, covering the period 1930s-1990s, exhibit distinct increases caused by the nuclear activities, and their increasing profiles are clearly different from each other. The first distinct I/I increase occurs from 1955 to 1959, followed by a decrease in 1960-1963. The increase is probably due to US atmospheric nuclear explosions in Bikini and Eniwetok Atolls in 1954, 1956 and 1958. The I produced in those nuclear tests would be transported by the North Equatorial Current, a portion of which passes through the Indonesian Throughflow and then reaches Rowley Shoals. This initial increase from 1955 is, however, absent in the ΔC record, which shows a distinct increase from 1959 and its peak around the mid-1970s, followed by a gradual decrease. This absence and the 4-year-delayed ΔC increase are likely due to dilution of explosion-produced C with natural carbon (by seawater mixing and air-sea gas exchange) being much more intense than that of explosion-produced I with natural iodine (by the same processes), suggesting that the I/I ratio is a more conservative anthropogenic tracer in surface ocean waters, as compared to ΔC. The second I/I increase is contemporaneous with a rapid ΔC increase during 1964-1967, followed by a rapid I/I decrease in 1968-1969; the increases can be ascribed to very large atmospheric nuclear explosions conducted in the former Soviet Union in 1961-1962. The third I/I increase appears between 1969/1970 and 1992, which can be attributed to airborne I released from nuclear-fuel reprocessing facilities in Europe, the former Soviet Union and the US. The coral I/I and ΔC time series records, combined with previous studies, enhance our understanding of the behavior of anthropogenic I and C in the global ocean and atmosphere.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvrad.2021.106593 | DOI Listing |
New Microbes New Infect
December 2024
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Teikyo University School of Medicine, Kaga, Itabashi, Tokyo, Japan.
Background: Carbapenem-resistant is of increasing global concern because infections are challenging to treat with standard antibiotics. Here, we identified a previously uncharacterised sp. clinical isolate as co-producing IMP-1 and OXA-58.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Hum Behav
April 2023
Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba, Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Angiol Sosud Khir
December 2016
Chair of General Surgery of the North-West State Medical University named after I.I. Mechnikov, Saint Petersburg, Russia.
The authors analysed clinical peculiarities of atherosclerosis of peripheral arteries (hereinafter referred to as APA) in patients presenting with abdominal aortic calcification (AAC). In order to determine the incidence rate of AAC in the population of patients with APA we analysed medical records of a total of 1,800 patients. The study itself included a total of 193 patients with APA further subdivided into two groups: 108 patients with AAC (Study Group) and 85 patients without AAC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Epidemiol
April 2000
Department of Epidemiology, National Institute for Longevity Sciences, Aichi, Japan.
Phenotypes of various genes related to geriatric diseases and the aging process were assessed in the National Institute for Longevity Sciences, Longitudinal Study of Aging (NILS-LSA). The subjects were 1,297 participants in the NILS-LSA. They were community-living males and females aged 40 to 79 years who were randomly selected from the area of the NILS.
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