Radiation doses to critical groups since the early 1950s due to discharges of liquid radioactive waste from Sellafield
Autor: | Hunt Gj |
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Rok vydání: | 1997 |
Předmět: |
Actinoid Series Elements
Epidemiology Health Toxicology and Mutagenesis Water Pollution Radioactive Liquid waste Radiation Dosage Laverbread Effective dose (radiation) Food chain Radioactive contamination Environmental monitoring Animals Humans Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging Food Contamination Radioactive Shellfish Wales business.industry Fishes Radioactive waste History 20th Century Seaweed Cesium Radioisotopes Environmental chemistry Radioactive Waste Environmental science Ruthenium Radioisotopes Nuclear medicine business Dose rate Environmental Monitoring |
Zdroj: | Health physics. 72(4) |
ISSN: | 0017-9078 |
Popis: | First, some of the early work is reviewed on exposure pathways in connection with proposed and early liquid radioactive waste discharges from Sellafield. The main historical features of these discharges, affected by relevant plant operations, are then briefly described. The important radiological exposure pathways resulting from the discharges and people's consumption and occupancy habits are considered. To place the changing scenario onto a consistent basis using present-day methodology, a reconstruction of exposures has been carried out using environmental monitoring data and models. The three major pathways are examined of Porphyra/laverbread consumption in South Wales, fish and shellfish consumption near Sellafield, and external exposure over local and more distant sediments. The results show that over the period 1952 to about 1970 the laverbread pathway was probably critical, taking a cautious approach. Effective dose rates fluctuated at around 1 mSv y(-1) from about 1956 to 1971. From about 1970 to 1985, the fish and shellfish pathway was likely to have been critical, with effective dose rates peaking at about 2 mSv y(-1) in 1975-1976. External exposure was likely to have been of lesser importance than the other two pathways until about 1985, when with the retention of previously-released radiocesium on sediments it has become dominant. This phenomenon applies particularly further afield where radiocesium concentrations have been slower to decline; in the Ribble estuary, houseboat dwellers have been the critical group from about 1985. Effective doses have been at about 0.3 mSv y(-1) and declining; they are due to the effects of radiocesium discharges in earlier years. Dose rates have remained within contemporary ICRP dose limits. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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