Concentrations of selected radionuclides and their spatial distribution in marine sediments from the northwestern Gulf, Kuwait
2018
Uddin, Saif | Behbehani, Montaha
This study focuses on creating a baseline for ⁴⁰K, ²¹⁰Pb, ¹³⁷Cs, ⁹⁰Sr, ²²⁶Ra, ²²⁸Ra, ²³⁸U, ²³⁵U, ²³⁴U, ²³⁹⁺²⁴⁰Pu and ²³⁸Pu in marine sediments in the northwestern Gulf. The respective measured concentration ranges were 386–489, 32.3–48.8, 1.5–2.9, 4.53–5.42, 18.3–23.1, 18.8–23.0, 22.3–30.5, 0.99–1.33, 25.6–34.8, 0.30–0.93, and 0.0008–0.00018Bqkg⁻¹. The levels of these radionuclides are generally comparable to values reported for other marine waters in the northern hemisphere. The ¹³⁷Cs activity in the Gulf sediments offshore Kuwait is an order of magnitude lower compared to sediments from northeastern Iran. Other than that finding, no hot spots were observed in sediments adjacent to power and desalination plants, oil and gas industrial activities or wastewater treatment facilities. These data will serve as a baseline to gauge possible future inputs of radionuclides in the northern Gulf. The calculated average ratio of ²³⁵U/²³⁸U activity in the area is in agreement with the reported figure of the natural uranium ratio, suggesting the absence of depleted uranium (DU) at all the stations. The low concentration of ²³⁹⁺²⁴⁰Pu suggests that there is no significant source of plutonium except that from atmospheric fallout from weapon testing and possible dry deposition via long-range dust transport.
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