Abstract

The external and internal exposure doses due to artificial radionuclides after the return of residents to their homes in Kawauchi Village, Fukushima Prefecture, including the restricted area within a 20-km radius from the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant (FNPP), were evaluated by gamma spectrometry of the soils and local agricultural products. The prevalent dose-forming artificial radionuclides from all samples were determined to be (134)Cs and (137)Cs (radiocesium). The estimated external effective doses from soils sampled on December 24 and 25, 2012 were 0.0017-9.2 mSv/y in the areas within a 20- to 30-km radius from the FNPP and 0.39-1.3 mSv/y in the areas within a 20-km radius from the FNPP. These levels appeared to be decreasing, despite the distance from the FNPP (median: 0.21 (0.012-0.56) mSv/y), compared to the levels just before the return of the residents to their homes on December 19 and 20, 2011 (median: 0.85 (0.40-1.4) mSv/y). The committed effective doses from the local agricultural samples in Kawauchi Village from May 1, 2012 to March 31, 2013 were sufficiently low, in the range of 18-44 μSv/y for males and 20-48 μSv/y for females (the range was 18-48 μSv/y for children and 25-43 μSv/y for adults), compared to the public dose limit (1 mSv/y, ICRP, 1991), although the potential for radiation exposure still exists. Residents who have not yet returned may be able to return to their homes with a long-term follow-up of environmental monitoring and countermeasures to reduce unnecessary radiation exposure.

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