Geologic radon potential of EPA Region 3: Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and West Virginia
R.R. Schumann, editor(s)
1993, Open-File Report 93-292-C
No abstract available....
Geologic radon potential of EPA Region 4; Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee
R.R. Schumann, editor(s)
1993, Open-File Report 93-292-D
No abstract available....
Geologic radon potential of EPA Region 5; Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin
R.R. Schumann, editor(s)
1993, Open-File Report 93-292-E
No abstract available....
Geologic radon potential of the United States
R. Randall Schumann, editor(s)
1993, Open-File Report 93-292
The Indoor Radon Abatement Act of 1988 (Public Law 100-551) directed the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to identify areas of the United States that have the potential to produce harmful levels of indoor radon, based on both geological data and on indoor radon levels in homes and other structures....
Concentration history during pumping from a leaky aquifer with stratified initial concentration
Daniel J. Goode, Paul A. Hsieh, Allen M. Shapiro, Warren W. Wood, Thomas F. Kraemer
1993, Conference Paper, Proceedings - National Conference on Hydraulic Engineering
Analytical and numerical solutions are employed to examine the concentration history of a dissolved substance in water pumped from a leaky aquifer. Many aquifer systems are characterized by stratification, for example, a sandy layer overlain by a clay layer. To obtain information about separate hydrogeologic units, aquifer pumping tests are...
Long-term radon concentrations estimated from 210Po embedded in glass
R.S. Lively, D.J. Steck
1993, Health Physics (64) 485-490
Measured surface-alpha activity on glass exposed in radon chambers and houses has a linear correlation to the integrated radon exposure. Experimental results in chambers and houses have been obtained on glass exposed to radon concentrations between 100 Bq m-3 and 9 MBq m-3 for periods of a few days to...
Radon anomalies on three kinds of faults in California
C.-Y. King, W. Zhang, B.-S. King
1993, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (141) 111-124
Radon emanation is known to be anomalously high along active faults in many parts of the world. We tested this relationship in California during July and early August 1992, using a portable radonmeter to conduct soil-air radon surveys at 5 sites across three kinds of faults: Creeping, locked, and freshly...
Radionuclides in ground water of the Carson River Basin, western Nevada and eastern California, U.S.A.
J. M. Thomas, A. H. Welch, M.S. Lico, J. L. Hughes, R. Whitney
1993, Applied Geochemistry (8) 447-471
Ground water is the main source of domestic and public supply in the Carson River Basin. Ground water originates as precipitation primarily in the Sierra Nevada in the western part of Carson and Eagle Valleys, and flows down gradient in the direction of the Carson River through Dayton and Churchill...
A theoretical model for the flux of radon from rock to ground water
Richard B. Wanty, Errol P. Lawrence, Linda C. Gundersen
1992, GSA Special Papers (271)
A model is derived to predict the abundance of 222Rn in ground water in contact with a rock of known uranium content. The model assumes that secular equilibrium is attained in the rock-water system as a whole, but is independent of any microscopic geometric properties of the system. The key...
Bibliography of radon in the outdoor environment and selected references on gas mobility in the ground
Allan B. Tanner
1992, Open-File Report 92-351-C
A reconnaissance study of radon levels in soils developed on the Upper Cretaceous Pierre Shale just above the Sharon Springs Member in the Missouri River valley in southeastern South Dakota and northeastern Nebraska
K. A. Dickinson
1992, Open-File Report 92-592
Data for radon-222 and other radionuclides in ground water, Nevada, 1986-89
Michael S. Lico
1992, Open-File Report 91-488
No abstract available....
Radon in soil gas and soil radioactivity in Prince George's County, Maryland
James K. Otton
1992, Open-File Report 92-11
Bibliography of radon in the outdoor environment and selected references on gas mobility in the ground
Allan B. Tanner
1992, Open-File Report 92-351-B
Bibliography of radon in the outdoor environment and selected references on gas mobility in the ground
Allan B. Tanner
1992, Open-File Report 92-351-A
Comment on “222Rn Premonitory signals for earthquakes?”
Chi-Yu King
1992, Eos Science News (73) 517-518
Radon and other terrestrial gases in groundwater and soil air have been studied in recent years in seismically active areas, especially in China, Japan, the former Soviet Union, and the United States, in search of changes that may be useful for earthquake prediction. Concentrations of radon, helim, hydrogen, mercury vapor,...
Effects of weather and soil characteristics on temporal variations in soil-gas radon concentrations
R. Randall Schumann, Douglass E. Owen, Sigrid Asher-Bolinder
1992, Book chapter, Geologic controls on radon
Concentrations of radon-222 in soil gas measured over about 1 yr at a monitoring site in Denver, Colorado, vary by as much as an order of magnitude seasonally and as much as severalfold in response to changes in weather. The primary weather factors that influence soil-gas radon concentrations are precipitation...
Contribution of 222Rn in domestic water supplies to 222Rn in indoor air in Colorado homes
E.P. Lawrence, R. B. Wanty, P. Nyberg
1992, Health Physics (62) 171-177
The contribution of 222Rn from domestic water wells to indoor air was investigated in a study of 28 houses near Conifer, CO. Air concentrations determined by alpha-track detectors (ATDs) and continuous radon monitors were compared with the predictions of a single-cell model. In many of the houses, the water supply...
Sampling and analysis for radon-222 dissolved in ground water and surface water
L. DeWayne Cecil, T.F. Gesell
1992, Environmental Monitoring and Assessment (20) 55-66
Radon-222 is a naturally occurring radioactive gas in the uranium-238 decay series that has traditionally been called, simply, radon. The lung cancer risks associated with the inhalation of radon decay products have been well documented by epidemiological studies on populations of uranium miners.The realization that radon is a public health...
Methodology for rapid assessment of the radon potential of soils
G.M. Reimer
1992, Conference Paper, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry
A technique using a small diameter probe and a portable alpha-particle scintillometer for sample collection and analysis has been developed. It is fast, efficient, cost-effective, and can be modified to accommodate a wide spectrum of sampling conditions. When soil-gas sampling for radon is combined with geophysical gamma-ray measurements, pedological characteristics...
The effect of rock type, grain size, sorting, permeability, and moisture on measurements of radon in soil gas: A comparison of two measurement techniques
L.C.S. Gundersen
1992, Conference Paper, Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry
Soil surveys of radon conducted in the Coastal Plain of New Jersey, Alabama and Texas indicate that soil composition and grain size exert the strongest control on the concentration of radon measured. Soil-gas radon was measured in-situ using two techniques; one developed by G. Michael REIMER of the U.S. Geological...
The geology of radon
James K. Otton
1992, Report
Statistical analysis of the radon-222 potential of rocks in Virginia, U.S.A.
C. Erwin Brown, D.G. Mose, G.W. Mushrush, C.E. Chrosniak
1992, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (19) 193-203
More than 3,200 indoor radon-222 (222Rn) measurements were made seasonally in an area of about 1,000 square kilometers of the Coastal Plain and Piedmont physiographic provinces in Virginia, U.S.A. Results of these measurements indicate that some geological units are associated, on the average, with twice as much indoor222Rn as other...
Using soil gas radon and geology to estimate regional radon potential
G.M. Reimer
1992, Conference Paper, Radiation Protection Dosimetry
Two important parameters have been identified in order to estimate the radon potential of a region. They are the soil gas radon concentration and the geological rock type from which soils are derived. A simple soil gas collection and analytical technique has been developed to provide information on soil gas...
Geohydrologic, geochemical, and geologic controls on the occurrence of radon in ground water near Conifer, Colorado, USA
E. Lawrence, E. Poeter, R. Wanty
1991, Journal of Hydrology (127) 367-386
Integrated studies of geohydrology, geochemistry, and geology of crystalline rocks in the vicinity of Conifer, Colorado, reveal that radon concentrations do not correlate with variations in concentrations of other dissolved species. Concentrations of major ions show systematic variations along selected groundwater flowpaths, whereas radon concentrations are dependent on local geochemical...