Abstract

Abstract. Two cores of bottom sediments were collected in 2018 to a depth of ∼200 cm in the deepest part of the Scheckino reservoir on the Upa River (9500 km2), Tula region, Russia. This area was severely contaminated by radiocesium (r-Cs) after the Chernobyl accident in 1986. The fact that 137Cs activity concentrations in a specific horizon of the bottom sediments correspond to 137Cs concentrations associated with suspended matter delivered to the reservoir, provides a basis for constructing the dynamics of particulate 137Cs activity concentrations in the Upa River catchment from 1986 to 2017. Over the time since the Chernobyl accident, the particulate 137Cs concentrations have decreased by more than an order of magnitude, with only minor changes occurring during the last 15 years. Using a typical value for the distribution coefficient Kd for the rivers of the Chernobyl contamination zone, dissolved 137Cs activity concentrations in the Upa River have been estimated and their changes over the past 30 years since the accident have been studied. The resulting estimates of dissolved 137Cs concentrations in the Upa River have been found to be in good agreement with measured data over the period 1987–1991. The proposed and tested method provides a basis for reconstructing the long-term dependence of radionuclide concentrations in rivers and reservoirs based on their vertical distribution in bottom sediments. Reconstructed time dependencies of particulate and dissolved 137Cs activity concentrations in the Upa River were found to be described well by the proposed semi-empirical “diffusion” model based on an assumption that the time dependency of particulate r-Cs in the river corresponds to the time dependency of its concentration in top soil layers across the catchment which can be approximated by a dispersion-convection equation with physically meaningful parameters.

Highlights

  • Large areas of land were contaminated with radionuclides from the Chernobyl fallout (Izrael, 1998)

  • The 137Cs inventory is more than twice the corresponding maximum inventory for the Upa River basin (Fig. 2)

  • No systematic long-term monitoring of radioactive contamination has been conducted on the Upa River

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Summary

Introduction

Large areas of land were contaminated with radionuclides from the Chernobyl fallout (Izrael, 1998). Long-term data are not always available regarding changes in radioactive contamination, and this is the case for 137Cs in the Chernobyl zone rivers Against this background, this study attempted to reconstruct, from 1986 to the present day, changes in 137Cs concentrations in the Upa River as a result of the Tula-Oryol contamination zone, based on the current vertical distribution of 137Cs (as of 2018) in bottom sediments of the Scheckino reservoir. This study attempted to reconstruct, from 1986 to the present day, changes in 137Cs concentrations in the Upa River as a result of the Tula-Oryol contamination zone, based on the current vertical distribution of 137Cs (as of 2018) in bottom sediments of the Scheckino reservoir These changes are described by a semi-empirical diffusion model

Sampling and processing of bottom sediments
Particulate 137Cs in surface runoff and rivers
Dissolved 137Cs in surface runoff and rivers
Results and discussion

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