Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-wq484 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T17:37:46.566Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Behavior of Sellafield-Derived 14C in the Northeast Irish Sea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 July 2016

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Radiocarbon is an important constituent of the low level, liquid, radioactive effluent discharged from the Sellafield nuclear fuel reprocessing plant in northwest England, but despite the fact that it gives the highest collective dose commitment of all the nuclides in the waste, its behavior in the Irish Sea is poorly defined. There is therefore a clear requirement for an improved understanding of 14C behavior in the Irish Sea, to assist with dose evaluation modeling and definition of the mixing and accumulation characteristics of the sediment in this area. In this context, results are presented here for a temporal study of 14C activities in four geochemical fractions of seawater and in a sediment core from the vicinity of the Sellafield effluent outfall. Clear 14C enrichments in the dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) and particulate organic carbon (POC) components of seawater were observed, with temporal trends in activity that were related to variations in the Sellafield discharge. Smaller, but nevertheless detectable, enrichments were also observed for particulate inorganic carbon (PIC) and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) in the seawater. The distribution of 137Cs and 241Am revealed that the sediment core could be classified into three zones in which the intensity of mixing decreased discontinuously with depth. Bulk carbonate 14C analyses of the core demonstrated the presence of glacial or pre-glacial carbonate in the system, but failed to show any evidence of contaminant 14C input or provide information on sediment accumulation processes. In contrast, analysis of bulk organic matter from the sediment provided clear evidence of the recent perturbation of a well mixed system by input of younger material, consistent with the recent input of contaminant 14C from Sellafield and possibly weapons testing fallout.

Type
Part 1: Methods
Copyright
Copyright © The American Journal of Science 

References

Begg, F. H. (ms.) 1992 Anthropogenic 14C in the natural (aquatic) environment. Ph.D Dissertation, University of Glasgow.Google Scholar
Begg, F. H., Cook, G. T., Baxter, M. S., Scott, E. M. and McCartney, M. 1992 Anthropogenic radiocarbon in the eastern Irish Sea and Scottish coastal waters. In Long, A. and Kra, R. S., eds., Proceedings of the 14th International 14C Conference. Radiocarbon, 34(3): 707716.Google Scholar
BNFL 1977–1994 Annual Reports on Radioactive Discharges and Monitoring of the Environment. Risley, UK, British Nuclear Fuels Limited.Google Scholar
Cook, G. T., Begg, F. H., Naysmith, P., Scott, E. M. and McCartney, M. 1995 Anthropogenic 14C marine geochemistry in the vicinity of a nuclear fuel reprocessing plant. In Cook, G. T., Harkness, D. D., Miller, B. F. and Scott, E. M., eds., Proceedings of the 15th International 14C Conference. Radiocarbon 37(2): 459467.Google Scholar
Cook, G. T., MacKenzie, A. B., McDonald, P. and Jones, S. R. 1997a Remobilisation of Sellafield derived radionuclides and transport from the north-east Irish Sea. Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 37: 227241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cook, G. T., MacKenzie, A. B., Naysmith, P. and Anderson, R. 1997b Natural and anthropogenic 14C in the UK coastal marine environment. Journal of Environmental Radioactivity, in press.Google Scholar
Cronan, D. S. 1969 Recent sedimentation in the central north-east Irish Sea. Institute of Geological Sciences Report No. 69/8: 10 p.Google Scholar
Fry, B., Peltzer, E. T., Hopkinson, C. S. Jr., Nolin, A. and Redmond, L. 1996 Analysis of marine DOC using a dry combustion method. Marine Chemistry 54: 191201.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, J., Jones, S. R. and Smith, A. D. 1995 Discharges to the environment from the Sellafield Site, 1951–1992. Journal of Radiological Protection 15(2): 99131.Google Scholar
Hunt, G. J. and Kershaw, P. J. 1990 Remobilisation of artificial radionuclides from the sediment of the Irish Sea. Journal of Radiological Protection 10: 147151.Google Scholar
Jones, D. J., Roberts, P. D. and Miller, J. M. 1988 The distribution of gamma-emitting radionuclides in near surface subtidal sediments near the Sellafield plant. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 27: 143161.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jull, A. J. T., Donahue, D. J., Hatheway, A. L., Linick, T. W. and Toolin, L. J. 1986 Production of graphite targets by deposition from CO/H2 for precision accelerator 14C measurements. Radiocarbon 28(1): 191197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kershaw, P. J. 1986 Radiocarbon dating of Irish Sea sediments. Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science 23: 295303.Google Scholar
Kershaw, P. J., Swift, D. J., Pentreath, R. J. and Lovett, M. B. 1983 Plutonium redistribution by biological activity in Irish Sea sediments. Nature 306: 774775.Google Scholar
Kershaw, P. J., Swift, D. J., Pentreath, R. J. and Lovett, M. B. 1984 The incorporation of plutonium, americium and curium into the Irish Sea seabed by biological activity. Science of the Total Environment 40: 61–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kershaw, P. J., Swift, D. J. and Denoon, D. C. 1988 Evidence of recent sedimentation in the Eastern Irish Sea. Marine Geology 85: 114.Google Scholar
Kershaw, P. J., Gurbutt, P. A., Young, A. K. and Ailing-ton, D. J. 1988 Scavenging and bioturbation in the Irish Sea from measurements of 234Th/238U and 210Pb/226Ra disequilibria. In Guary, J. C., Guegueniat, P. and Pentreath, R. J., eds., Radionuclides: A Tool for Oceanography. London, Elsevier Applied Science: 131142.Google Scholar
Kirby, R., Parker, W. R., Pentreath, R. J. and Lovett, M. B. 1983 Sediment studies relevant to low level radioactive effluent dispersal in the Irish Sea. Part 3: An evaluation of possible mechanisms for the incorporation of radionuclides into marine sediments. IOS Report No. 178. Godalming, UK, Institute of Oceanographic Sciences.Google Scholar
MAFF 1996 Radioactivity in food and the environment, 1995. Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food RIFE-1, London, UK.Google Scholar
MacKenzie, A. B., Scott, R. D., Allan, R. L., Ben Shaban, Y. A., Cook, G. T. and Pulford, I. D. 1994 Sediment radionuclide profiles: implications for mechanisms of Sellafield waste dispersal in the Irish Sea. Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 23: 3969.Google Scholar
MacKenzie, A. B., Cook, G. T., McDonald, P. and Jones, S. R. 1998 The influence of mixing timescales and re-dissolution processes on the distribution of radionuclides in the north-east Irish Sea. Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 39: 3553.Google Scholar
McCartney, M., Kershaw, P. J., Woodhead, D. S. and Denoon, D. C. 1994 Artificial radionuclides in the surface sediments of the Irish Sea, 1968–1988. Science of the Total Environment 141: 103138.Google Scholar
Miller, J. M., Thomas, B. W., Roberts, P. D. and Creamer, S. C. 1982 Measurement of marine radionuclide distribution using a towed sea-bed spectrometer. Marine Pollution Bulletin 13: 315319.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pantin, H. M. 1977 Quaternary sediments of the northern Irish Sea. In Kidson, C. and Tooley, M. J., eds., The Quaternary History of the Irish Sea. Liverpool, Seel House Press: 2754.Google Scholar
Pantin, H. M. 1978 Quaternary sediments from the north-east Irish Sea: Isle of Man to Cumbria. Bulletin of the Geological Survey of Great Britain, No. 64: 43 p.Google Scholar
Pedersen, T. S., Sholkovitz, E. R. and Malcolm, S. J. 1985 A lightweight gravity corer for undisturbed sampling of soft sediments. Canadian Journal of Earth Science 22: 133135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pentreath, R. J., Lovett, M. B., Jefferies, D. F., Woodhead, D. S. Talbot, J. W. and Mitchell, N. T. 1984 Impact on public radiation exposure of transuranium nuclides discharged in liquid wastes from fuel element reprocessing at Sellafield, United Kingdom. In Radioactive Waste Management. Vol. 5. IAEA, Vienna.Google Scholar
Smith, T. J., Parker, W. R. and Kirby, R. 1980 Sedimentation studies relevant to low-level radioactive effluent dispersal in the Irish Sea. Part 1: Radionuclides in marine sediments. IOS Report No. 110. Godalming, UK, Institute of Oceanographic Sciences: 87 p.Google Scholar
Williams, S. J., Kirby, R., Smith, T. J. and Parker, W. R. 1981 Sediment studies relevant to low level radioactive effluent dispersal in the Irish Sea. Part 2: Seabed morphology, sediments and shallow sub-bottom stratigraphy of the eastern Irish Sea. IOS Report No. 120. Godalming, UK, Institute of Oceanographic Sciences.Google Scholar