New Insights into Pb Isotope Fingerprinting of U-Mine Material Dissemination in the Environment: Pb Isotopes as a Memory Dissemination Tracer
Author(s) -
Alkiviadis Gourgiotis,
Arnaud Mangeret,
G. Manhès,
Pascale Blanchart,
Lucie Stetten,
Guillaume Morin,
P. Bonville,
Pierre Lefebvre,
Mathieu Le Coz,
Charlotte Cazala
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
environmental science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.851
H-Index - 397
eISSN - 1520-5851
pISSN - 0013-936X
DOI - 10.1021/acs.est.9b04828
Subject(s) - radiogenic nuclide , tracer , isotope , radionuclide , environmental chemistry , isotope analysis , environmental science , wetland , geology , geochemistry , stable isotope ratio , radiochemistry , chemistry , ecology , mantle (geology) , physics , oceanography , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics , biology
Stable Pb isotope ratios were measured and compared to U distributions in three soil cores located in a wetland highly impacted by water discharge of a former U-mine. Pb isotope ratios showed notable alignments in binary mixing plots, demonstrating the dissemination of radioactive-enriched material from the U-mine. Thanks to these alignments and to the measurement of the 204 Pb isotope, a precise characterization of the Pb isotope composition of the U-ore was performed without the use of U-ore samples. The well-defined end-members with the help of a reevaluated isotope mixing model allowed the accurate determination of the radiogenic Pb percentages in the cores that were overall found to be >50%. Noncorrelated distributions of radiogenic 206 Pb and U are observed in several of the wetland soil samples. They reveal postdepositional U redistribution explained by major U speciation changes due to redox cycling in the wetland. On the contrary, the radiogenic 206 Pb showed no or little postdepositional mobility and thus can be considered to be a memory tracer of the dissemination of U-rich radioactive material: even after an important U loss, the radiogenic 206 Pb is able to reveal past contamination by U-rich materials.
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