Abstract

Following the Chernobyl accident, an area of ∼1000 m(2) in the University farm of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki was considered as a test ground for radioecological measurements. The radiocesium deposition in this area, due to the Chernobyl accident, was 20 kBq m(-2). The profile of (137)Cs in the soil of this area was measured systematically from 1987 to 2012. The form of the profile has changed over the years. During the 1987-2000 period the (137)Cs distribution was reproducible by a sum of two exponentials. However, at least since 2005 the (137)Cs distribution can be successfully fitted by a single exponential function. The long-time (∼27 y) evolution study of the (137)Cs distribution in soil permit one to extract with the use of a simple compartment model, the mean vertical migration velocity of (137)Cs. Vertical migration of (137)Cs in soil is a very slow process. The mean vertical migration velocity is estimated to be 0.14 cm y(-1).The relative good comparison between the time dependence of the (137)Cs distribution in soil and the model predictions indicate that the simple model used is realistic.

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