AI Article Synopsis

  • - Uranium mining negatively impacts local water bodies by releasing long-lasting radionuclides, prompting a study at three effluent release points (#014, #025, #076) from an old mine undergoing decommissioning.
  • - Water samples were analyzed for various radionuclides using techniques aligned with established safety criteria by the World Health Organization and Brazilian legislation, revealing different levels of contamination at each sampling location.
  • - Although radionuclide levels at the three sites were generally within safe limits for public use, point #076 exhibited chemical toxicity issues, indicating that water from this site should be restricted for safe use.

Article Abstract

Uranium mining causes several radiological impacts on the surrounding environment, notably in the water bodies, mainly due to the release of long half-life radionuclides from the U and Th series. The Ore Treatment Unit, an old uranium mine undergoing decommissioning, has three points of liquid effluent release (#014, #025, and #076). For current study, 78 samples of water were collected at #014, 33 samples at #025, and 63 samples at #076. The radionuclides were analyzed by gross alpha count, gross beta count, and by arsenazo spectrophotometry. Analyses were carried out using the radiological water quality criterion established by World Health Organization and other organizations, together with the Brazilian legislation, to assess if the released effluents may be used unrestrictedly by the individuals of the public. At #014, the mean values of activity concentration (AC), in Bq·L, were as follows: U = 0.107, Ra = 0.035, Pb = 0.031, Th = 0.007, and Ra = 0.049. At #025 the mean values of AC, in Bq·L, were as follows: U = 0.086, Ra = 0.015, Pb = 0.028, Th = 0.006, and Ra = 0.032. Finally, at point #076, the mean AC values, in Bq·L, were as follows: U = 3.624, Ra = 0.074, Pb = 0.054, Th = 0.013, and Ra = 0.069. The current study showed that natural radionuclides were not in secular equilibrium. Despite uranium presented its values outside the limits of guidance levels, it can be state that the unrestricted use of effluents released in the three water bodies is authorized from the radiological point of view. In terms of dose rate, the releases at three points were within the radiological limits of potability. On the other hand, in an additional analysis, #76 presented chemical toxicity above the authorized value, pointing the need of restricted use of water from the point of view of chemical toxicity.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11356-023-26964-9DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

water quality
8
quality criterion
8
effluent release
8
uranium mine
8
water bodies
8
three points
8
current study
8
values bq·l
8
point view
8
chemical toxicity
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!