Abstract

Plutonium fallout from atmospheric nuclear weapons testing in the 1950s and 1960s constitutes an artificial tracer suitable for the study of recent soil erosion and sediment accumulation rates. Long-lived Pu isotopes provide an alternative tracer to the more widely used 137Cs (t1/2=30 a), the concentration of which is decaying at a rate that will limit its long-term application to these studies. For 239,240Pu, the sensitivity of AMS is more than an order of magnitude better than that afforded by α-spectroscopy. Furthermore, AMS can provide a simple, direct measure of the 240Pu/239Pu ratio. Sample profiles from two sites along eastern Australia have been determined with both AMS and α-spectroscopy to provide comparative measurements of the sediment accumulation rate in water bodies and of the soil erosion rate. The two methods are in good agreement.The 228Ra/226Ra ratio potentially provides a probe for tracing the dispersion of uranium mining residues into the neighboring environment. Soil depth profiles of the ratio may provide information on the rate at which mining-derived radioactivity is spread by surface waters, and could be used to assess the effectiveness of remediation and rehabilitation technologies. AMS offers several advantages over the more usual α- and γ-spectroscopy techniques in that it can directly and quickly measure both isotopes in a sample of small size and with simple sample preparation.We show that AMS can be used to measure these isotopes of radium at the sensitivity required for environmental samples using RaC2− as the injected beam species.

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