Radioactive material from Fukushima disaster turns up in a surprising place
Some of highest levels of cesium-137 contamination are in groundwater under nearby sandy beaches
Six years after the Fukushima nuclear
reactor disaster in Japan, radioactive material is leaching into the
Pacific Ocean from an unexpected place. Some of the highest levels of
radioactive cesium-137, a major by-product of nuclear power generation,
are now found in the somewhat salty groundwater beneath sand beaches
tens of kilometers away, a new study shows.
In the wake of the 2011 accident, seawater tainted with high levels of cesium-137 probably traveled along the coast and lapped against these beaches, proposes study coauthor Virginie Sanial, who did the work while at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts. Some cesium stuck to the sand and, over time, percolated down to the brackish groundwater beneath. Now, the radioactive material is steadily making its way back into the ocean. The groundwater is releasing the cesium into the coastal ocean at a rate that’s on par with the leakage of cesium into the ocean from the reactor site itself, Sanial’s team estimates.
Since this water isn’t a source of drinking water and is underground, the contamination isn’t an immediate public health threat, says Sanial, now a geochemist at the University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg. But with about half of the world’s nuclear power plants located on coastlines, such areas are potentially important contamination reservoirs and release sites to monitor after future accidents.
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