Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source

Anthropogenic 129I has been released to the environment in different ways and chemical species by human nuclear activities since the 1940s. These sources provide ideal tools to trace the dispersion of volatile pollutants in the atmosphere. Snow and seawater samples collected in Bellingshausen, Amund...

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Published in:Environmental Science & Technology
Main Authors: Xing,S(Xing,Shan) 1,5, Hou,XL(Hou,Xiaolin) 1,2, Aldahan,A(Aldahan,Ala) 3,6, Possnert,G(Possnert,Göran) 4, Shi,KL(Shi,Keliang) 2,7, Yi,P(Yi,Peng) 3,8, Zhou,WJ(Zhou,Weijian) 1
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ir.ieecas.cn/handle/361006/9481
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b01234
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spelling ftchinacascieeca:oai:ir.ieecas.cn:361006/9481 2023-06-11T04:06:25+02:00 Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source Xing,S(Xing,Shan) 1,5 Hou,XL(Hou,Xiaolin) 1,2 Aldahan,A(Aldahan,Ala) 3,6 Possnert,G(Possnert,Göran) 4 Shi,KL(Shi,Keliang) 2,7 Yi,P(Yi,Peng) 3,8 Zhou,WJ(Zhou,Weijian) 1 2015-05-05 http://ir.ieecas.cn/handle/361006/9481 https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b01234 英语 eng Environmental Science & Technology http://ir.ieecas.cn/handle/361006/9481 doi:10.1021/acs.est.5b01234 null 期刊论文 2015 ftchinacascieeca https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b01234 2023-05-08T13:23:09Z Anthropogenic 129I has been released to the environment in different ways and chemical species by human nuclear activities since the 1940s. These sources provide ideal tools to trace the dispersion of volatile pollutants in the atmosphere. Snow and seawater samples collected in Bellingshausen, Amundsen, and Ross Seas in Antarctica in 2011 were analyzed for 129I and 127I, including organic forms; it was observed that 129I/127I atomic ratios in the Antarctic surface seawater ((6.1−13) × 10−12) are about 2 orders of magnitude lower than those in the Antarctic snow ((6.8−9.5) × 10−10), but 4−6 times higher than the prenuclear level (1.5 × 10−12), indicating a predominantly anthropogenic source of 129I in the Antarctic environment. The 129I level in snow in Antarctica is 2−4 orders of magnitude lower than that in the Northern Hemisphere, but is not significantly higher than that observed in other sites in the Southern Hemisphere. This feature indicates that 129I in Antarctic snow mainly originates from atmospheric nuclear weapons testing from 1945 to 1980; resuspension and re-emission of the fallout 129I in the Southern Hemisphere maintains the 129I level in the Antarctic atmosphere. 129I directly released to the atmosphere and re-emitted marine discharged 129I from reprocessing plants in Europe might not significantly disperse to Antarctica. Report Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Institute of Earth Environment: IEECAS OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences) Antarctic The Antarctic Environmental Science & Technology 49 11 6691 6700
institution Open Polar
collection Institute of Earth Environment: IEECAS OpenIR (Chinese Academy of Sciences)
op_collection_id ftchinacascieeca
language English
description Anthropogenic 129I has been released to the environment in different ways and chemical species by human nuclear activities since the 1940s. These sources provide ideal tools to trace the dispersion of volatile pollutants in the atmosphere. Snow and seawater samples collected in Bellingshausen, Amundsen, and Ross Seas in Antarctica in 2011 were analyzed for 129I and 127I, including organic forms; it was observed that 129I/127I atomic ratios in the Antarctic surface seawater ((6.1−13) × 10−12) are about 2 orders of magnitude lower than those in the Antarctic snow ((6.8−9.5) × 10−10), but 4−6 times higher than the prenuclear level (1.5 × 10−12), indicating a predominantly anthropogenic source of 129I in the Antarctic environment. The 129I level in snow in Antarctica is 2−4 orders of magnitude lower than that in the Northern Hemisphere, but is not significantly higher than that observed in other sites in the Southern Hemisphere. This feature indicates that 129I in Antarctic snow mainly originates from atmospheric nuclear weapons testing from 1945 to 1980; resuspension and re-emission of the fallout 129I in the Southern Hemisphere maintains the 129I level in the Antarctic atmosphere. 129I directly released to the atmosphere and re-emitted marine discharged 129I from reprocessing plants in Europe might not significantly disperse to Antarctica.
format Report
author Xing,S(Xing,Shan) 1,5
Hou,XL(Hou,Xiaolin) 1,2
Aldahan,A(Aldahan,Ala) 3,6
Possnert,G(Possnert,Göran) 4
Shi,KL(Shi,Keliang) 2,7
Yi,P(Yi,Peng) 3,8
Zhou,WJ(Zhou,Weijian) 1
spellingShingle Xing,S(Xing,Shan) 1,5
Hou,XL(Hou,Xiaolin) 1,2
Aldahan,A(Aldahan,Ala) 3,6
Possnert,G(Possnert,Göran) 4
Shi,KL(Shi,Keliang) 2,7
Yi,P(Yi,Peng) 3,8
Zhou,WJ(Zhou,Weijian) 1
Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source
author_facet Xing,S(Xing,Shan) 1,5
Hou,XL(Hou,Xiaolin) 1,2
Aldahan,A(Aldahan,Ala) 3,6
Possnert,G(Possnert,Göran) 4
Shi,KL(Shi,Keliang) 2,7
Yi,P(Yi,Peng) 3,8
Zhou,WJ(Zhou,Weijian) 1
author_sort Xing,S(Xing,Shan) 1,5
title Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source
title_short Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source
title_full Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source
title_fullStr Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source
title_full_unstemmed Iodine-129 in Snow and Seawater in the Antarctic: Level and Source
title_sort iodine-129 in snow and seawater in the antarctic: level and source
publishDate 2015
url http://ir.ieecas.cn/handle/361006/9481
https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b01234
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation Environmental Science & Technology
http://ir.ieecas.cn/handle/361006/9481
doi:10.1021/acs.est.5b01234
op_rights null
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b01234
container_title Environmental Science & Technology
container_volume 49
container_issue 11
container_start_page 6691
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