Accidental Spreading of 90Sr from the Ob and Yenisey Rivers under Global Warming

The spatial and temporal distributions of the anthropogenic radionuclides 137Cs and 90Sr, originating from nuclear bomb testing, the Sellafield reprocessing plants in the Irish Sea, and the Ob and Yenisey river discharges, have been simulated using the Nansen Center global version of the Miami Isopy...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gao, Yongqi, Drange, Helge, Johannessen, Ola M., Petersson, Lasse H.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/7589879
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7589879
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Summary:The spatial and temporal distributions of the anthropogenic radionuclides 137Cs and 90Sr, originating from nuclear bomb testing, the Sellafield reprocessing plants in the Irish Sea, and the Ob and Yenisey river discharges, have been simulated using the Nansen Center global version of the Miami Isopycnic Co ordinate Ocean Model (MICOM). The physical model is forced with daily atmospheric re-analyses fields for the period 1950 to present. Comparison of the temp oral evolution of the observed and the simulated concentrations of 137Cs have been conducted for the regions east of Scotland, west of central Norway, and at the entrance of the Barents Sea. Comparison of the temp oral evolution of the observed and the simulated concentrations of 90Sr have also been performed in the Kara Sea. It is shown that the radionuclides from the Sellafield discharge reach the Barents Sea region after 4-5 years, in accordance with observations. The simulation provides a detailed distribution and evolution of the radionuclides over the integration time. For the Atlantic waters on the coast of Norway and in the southern Barents Sea, the atmospheric fallout dominates over the Sellafield release up to the mid 1960s and from the early 1990s, whereas Sella eld is the main source for the two radionuclides in the 1970s and 1980s. The Ob river discharge dominate the surface 90Sr over most of the Arctic Ocean and along the eastern and western coasts of Greenland before 1960. During the period of 1980 to 1990, the atmospheric fallout and the Ob river discharge are equally important for the 90Sr distribution in the Arctic Ocean. The difference between present-day and the 2xCO2 warming scenario runs for accidental releases of 90Sr in the Ob and Yenisey rivers indicates that the transport of the tracers can be accelerated in the 2xCO2 warming scenario run. It also follows that more of the released 90Sr is connected to the Arctic Ocean in the global warming run, particularly in the near coastal, non-European part of the Arctic Ocean. Therefore, a ...