Abstract

Large soil cores (23.5 cm diameter), containing elevated concentrations of plutonium and americium derived from fuel reprocessing effluents (typically 2000–3000 but up to 10000 Bq kg −1 239,240Pu and 3000–5000 but up to 15 000 Bq kg −1 241Am), were collected from three zones of a salt marsh in west Cumbria. The standing vegetation was removed, the cores placed in a greenhouse and the vegetation allowed to regrow. After 2 months, the regrowth was harvested and the amount of plutonium and americium taken up determined. These data, combined with data from earlier, in-situ sampling of soil pore waters and from analysis of soil cores, allow estimation of soil-plant transfers. If these are expressed simply as the ratio of the activity concentrations in the plant tissues to those in the soil, the values lie in the range 10 −5−10 −6, comparable to those found by many other workers. However, the ratio of concentrations in plant tissues to those in the soil solution is much higher; 40–110 l kg −1 for 239,240Pu and 210–640 l kg −1 for 241Am. There appears to be a consistent relationship between soil-plant transfer and the in-situ solid-solution distribution coefficient (Rd).

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