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Chemical analysis of water samples and geophysical logs from cored test holes drilled in the central Oklahoma Aquifer, Oklahoma
Jamie L. Schlottmann, Ron A. Funkhouser
1991, Open-File Report 91-464
Chemical analyses of water from eight test holes and geophysical logs for nine test holes drilled in the Central Oklahoma aquifer are presented. The test holes were drilled to investigate local occurrences of potentially toxic, naturally occurring trace substances in ground water. These trace substances include arsenic, chromium, selenium, residual...
Error in measuring radon in soil gas by means of passive detectors
A.B. Tanner
1991, Nuclear Geophysics (5) 25-30
Passive detection of radon isotopes depends on diffusion of radon atoms from the sites of their generation to the location of the detecting or collecting device. Because some radon decays en route to a passive detector in soil, the radon concentration measured by the detector must be less than the...
Recognition of microclimate zones through radon mapping, Lechuguilla Cave, Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico
K.I. Cunningham, E. J. LaRock
1991, Health Physics (61) 493-500
Radon concentrations range from <185 to 3,515 Bq m-3 throughout Lechuguilla Cave, Carlsbad Caverns National Park, New Mexico. Concentrations in the entrance passages and areas immediately adjacent to these passages are controlled by outside air temperature and barometric pressure, similar to other Type 2 caves. Most of the cave is...
Radon-222 and its parent radionuclides in groundwater from two study areas in New Jersey and Maryland, U.S.A.
R. B. Wanty, S. L. Johnson, Paul H. Briggs
1991, Applied Geochemistry (6) 305-318
A study of groundwater chemistry and radionuclide mobility in New Jersey and Maryland was conducted to investigate natural processes that control the mobility of radionuclides in the water-rock system. Groundwater was sampled from two geological units in New Jersey and from six in Maryland. The water sampled was from aquifiers...
Variations of electric resistance and H2 and Rn emissions of concrete blocks under increasing uniaxial compression
C.-Y. King, G. Luo
1990, Pure and Applied Geophysics PAGEOPH (134) 45-56
Electric resistance and emissions of hydrogen and radon isotopes of concrete (which is somewhat similar to fault-zone materials) under increasing uniaxial compression were continuously monitored to check whether they show any pre- and post-failure changes that may correspond to similar changes reported for earthquakes. The results show that all these...
Pedologic and climatic controls on Rn-222 concentrations in soil gas, Denver, Colorado
S. Asher-Bolinder, D.E. Owen, R.R. Schumann
1990, Geophysical Research Letters (17) 825-828
Soil-gas radon concentrations are controlled seasonally by factors of climate and pedology. In a swelling soil of the semiarid Western United States, soil-gas radon concentrations at 100 cm depth increase in winter and spring due to increased emanation with higher soil moisture and the capping effect...
Radium and radon in Charlotte Harbor Estuary, Florida
R. L. Miller, T. F. Kraemer, B. F. McPherson
1990, Estuarine, Coastal and Shelf Science (31) 439-457
Radium-226 and 222Rn activities are greater in the estuarine waters of northern Charlotte Harbor and the lower tidal Peace and Myakka Rivers, Florida, than in either the freshwater reaches of the rivers or waters of the lower estuary and the Gulf of Mexico. The activity of 226Ra in the tidal rivers increases...
Radium distribution and indoor radon in the Pacific Northwest
J. S. Duval, J. K. Otton
1990, Geophysical Research Letters (17) 801-804
Aerial gamma-ray data were compiled to produce a map showing the distribution of radium (226Ra) in near-surface materials in the Pacific Northwest (Washington, Oregon, and Idaho, and parts of Montana, Wyoming, California, Nevada, and Utah). A comparison of measurements of indoor concentration levels of radon (222Rn)...
Geochemical hosts of solubilized radionuclides in uranium mill tailings
E. R. Landa, C. A. Bush
1990, Hydrometallurgy (24) 361-372
The solubilization and subsequent resorption of radionuclides by ore components or by reaction products during the milling of uranium ores may have both economic and environmental consequences. Particle-size redistribution of radium during milling has been demonstrated by previous investigators; however, the identification of sorbing components in the tailings has received...
Flow of ground water through fractured carbonate rocks in the Prairie du Chien-Jordan Aquifer, southeastern Minnesota
J. F. Ruhl
1989, Open-File Report 89-253
Contamination of groundwater from point and nonpoint sources (such as landfills, feedlots, agricultural chemicals applied to fields, and septic systems) is a recognized problem in the karst area of southeastern Minnesota. The US Geological Survey, in cooperation with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and the Legislative Commission on Minnesota...
Uranium in Holocene valley-fill sediments, and uranium, radon, and helium in waters, Lake Tahoe-Carson Range area, Nevada and California, U.S.A.
J. K. Otton, R. A. Zielinski, J.M. Been
1989, Environmental Geology and Water Sciences (13) 15-28
Uraniferous Holocene sediments occur in the Carson Range of Nevada and California, U.S.A., between Lake Tahoe and Carson Valley. The hosts for the uranium include peat and interbedded organic-rich sand, silt, and mud that underly valley floors, fens, and marshes along stream valleys between the crest of the range and...
Radon measurements for earthquake prediction along the North Anatolian Fault Zone: A progress report
H. Friedmann, K. Aric, R. Gutdeutsch, C.-Y. King, C. Altay, H. Sav
1988, Tectonophysics (152) 209-214
Radon (222Rn) concentration has been continuously measured since 1983 in groundwater at a spring and in subsurface soil gas at five sites along a 200 km segment of the North Anatolian Fault Zone near Bolu, Turkey. The groundwater radon concentration showed a significant increase before the Biga earthquake of magnitude...
Map showing radon potential of rocks and soils in Montgomery County, Maryland
L.C. Gundersen, G.M. Reimer, C.R. Wiggs, C. A. Rice
1988, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2043
This report summarizes the radon potential of Montgomery County in the context of its geology. Radon is a naturally occurring gas produced by the radioactive decay of uranium. Radon produced by uraniferous rocks and soils may enter a house through porous building materials and through openings in walls and floors....
Distribution of gases in the unsaturated zone at a low-level radioactive-waste disposal site near Sheffield, Illinois
Robert G. Striegl
1988, Water-Resources Investigations Report 88-4025
The unsaturated zone is a medium that provides pneumatic communication for the movement of gases from wastes buried in landfills to the atmosphere, biota, and groundwater. Gases in unsaturated glacial and eolian deposits near a waste-disposal trench at the low-level radioactive-waste disposal site near Sheffield, Bureau County, Illinois, were identified,...
Map showing radon potential of rocks and soils in Fairfax County, Virginia
James K. Otton, R. Randall Schumann, Douglass E. Owen, Nelson Thurman, Joseph S. Duval
1988, Miscellaneous Field Studies Map 2047
Since 1984, indoor radon has gained national attention as a significant health hazard in the United States. Radon is a colorless, odorless, radioactive gas derived from uranium by radioactive decay. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) now projects that 5,000 to 20,000 lung-cancer deaths per year may be attributed to...
A tentative protocol for measurement of radon availability from the ground
A.B. Tanner
1988, Radiation Protection Dosimetry (24) 79-83
A procedure is being tested in order to determine its suitability for assessing the intrinsic ability of the ground at a particular site to supply 222Rn to a basement structure to be built on the site. Soil gas is sucked from a borehole probe through an alpha scintillation chamber and flow...
A tentative protocol for measurement of radon availability from the ground
A.B. Tanner
1988, Northeastern Environmental Science (7) 58-62
A procedure is being tested in order to determine its suitability for assessing the intrinsic ability of the ground at a particular site to supply radon (222Rn) to a basement structure to be built on the site. The mean migration distance, multiplied by the measured radon concentration gives the "Radon...