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Assessment of the tritium distribution in the vegetation cover in the areas of underground nuclear explosions at the Semipalatinsk test site. | LitMetric

This paper provides results of assessment of the tritium distribution in the vegetation cover in the areas of underground nuclear explosions at the Semipalatinsk Test Site (STS). The research was conducted at the former "Degelen" test site along the streams that are one of the main channels of tritium migration from underground nuclear explosions epicenters. The dominant plant species Carex supine and Achnatherum splendens that belong to different ecological groups in relation to humidity were selected as representatives of the vegetation cover. The TFWT (tissue free water tritium) and OBT (organically bound tritium) activity concentrations in the vegetation cover were measurement. TFWT activity concentration in the samples of both plant species had high values with an average of up to 30 kBq kg. The OBT activity concentration was 1-2 orders of magnitude lower than the TFWT in all plant samples. The TFWT and OBT activity concentrations in vegetation samples are closely correlated (r = 0.75, p < 0.05). No statistically significant difference was found between the content of tritium in the samples of Carex supine and those of Achnatherum splendens taken at the same locations. OBT/HTO ratios for vegetation samples of both species were close to equilibrium ratio used in environmental transfer models. In some cases, OBT/HTO ratios were significantly lower than one, which indicates that simple environmental transfer models may not accurately predict the behavior of HTO and OBT in different environmental compartments. The average OBT/HTO ratio for soil samples (0.6 ± 0.1) close to the equilibrium value indicates the equilibrium condition at the research area. The obtained [OBT]/[OBT] ratios indicate that soil organic matter accumulates tritium from year to year. However, in some locations with high tritium contamination ratios [OBT]/[OBT] were more than one due to OBT activity in soils is almost the same as OBT activity in plants. It was found that the nature of the spatial distribution of tritium in the vegetation cover in the areas of underground nuclear explosions is complex, and obviously depends on the location of the tunnels in which nuclear tests were conducted, as well as on the peculiarities of the hydrological regime of underground and surface waters, which are the main channels of tritium migration in the research area. Thus, the vegetation cover reflects the spatial distribution of tritium contamination in the sites of underground nuclear explosions and can be used as an indicator of the radiation situation when monitoring radiation-hazardous areas.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvrad.2021.106705DOI Listing

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