Validating plutonium-239+240 as a novel soil redistribution tracer – a comparison to measured sediment yield
Author:
Meusburger Katrin, Porto Paolo, Kobler Waldis Judith, Alewell ChristineORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Quantifying soil redistribution rates is a global challenge addressed with
direct sediment measurements (e.g. traps), models, and isotopic, geochemical,
and radionuclide tracers. The isotope of plutonium, namely 239+240Pu,
is a relatively new soil redistribution tracer in this challenge. Direct
validation of 239+240Pu as a soil redistribution tracer is, however, still
missing. We used a unique sediment yield time series in southern Italy,
reaching back to the initial fallout of 239+240Pu to verify
239+240Pu as a soil redistribution tracer. Distributed soil samples
(n=55) were collected in the catchment, and at undisturbed reference sites
(n=22), 239+240Pu was extracted, measured with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), and converted
to soil redistribution rates. Finally, we used a generalized additive model
(GAM) to regionalize soil redistribution estimates for the catchment. For
the catchment sites, mean 239+240Pu inventories were significantly
reduced (16.8 ± 10.2 Bq m−2) compared to the reference inventory
(40.5 ± 3.5 Bq m−2), indicating the dominance of erosion.
Converting these inventory losses into soil erosion rates resulted in an
average soil loss of 22.2 ± SD 7.2 t ha−1 yr−1. The
uncertainties of the approach stemmed mainly from the high measurement
uncertainties of some low-activity samples where samples have been bulked
over depth. Therefore, we recommend taking incremental soil samples and
extracting larger soil volumes (∼ 20 g). The geographic
coordinates and the flow accumulation best described the spatial pattern of
erosion rates in the GAM model. Using those predictors to upscale Pu-derived
soil redistribution rates for the entire catchment resulted in an average
on-site loss of 20.7 t ha−1 yr−1, which corresponds very well to
the long-term average sediment yield of 18.7 t ha−1 yr−1 measured at the catchment outlet and to 137Cs-derived soil
redistribution rates. Overall, this comparison of Pu-derived soil
redistribution rates with measured sediment yield data validates
239+240Pu as a suitable retrospective soil redistribution tracer.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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