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dc.contributor.authorMattern FCM
dc.contributor.authorDrost RMS
dc.contributor.authorOckhuizen A
dc.date.accessioned2012-12-12T13:40:35Z
dc.date.available2012-12-12T13:40:35Z
dc.date.issued1991-05-31
dc.identifier249109001
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10029/256217
dc.description.abstractAbstract niet beschikbaar
dc.description.abstractMeasurements of the concentrations in pasture and milk samples from the surroundings of nuclear installations gave for 1989 the following average values in pasture: Be-7: 83 +- 6 Bq/kg, K-40: 900 +- 50 Bq/kg, Sr-90: 1,9 +- 0,4 Bq/kg, Cs-137: 2,9 +- 0,6 Bq/kg. Sr-89, I-131 and Cs-134 were below the limit of detection. Rest-beta-activity and rest-gamma-activity in pasture were mostly below the limit of detection. The concentration of the stabile Ca was found to be 4,4 +- 0,2 g/kg. Average concentrations in milk were: for Sr-90: 0,031 +- 0,002 Bq/L and for Cs-137: 0,16 +- 0,05 Bq/L. Be-7, Sr-89, I-131 and Cs-134 were below the limit of detection. In the national milk samples, representative for the northern, eastern, southern and western parts of the Netherlands, average concentrations were: Sr-90: 0,04 +-0,01 Bq/L and Cs-137: 0,24 +- 0,01 Bq/L. Sr-89, I-131 and Cs-134 were not detectable. From the analysis follows that the detected radionuclides which are of artificial origin are due to global fallout from nuclear tests during the sixties and Chernobyl. Concentrations in pasture as well as in milk are almost equal to pre-Chernobyl values. Only Cs-137 concentrations in pasture are still clearly higher.
dc.description.sponsorshipVHI
dc.format.extent26 p
dc.language.isonl
dc.relation.ispartofRIVM Rapport 249109001
dc.relation.urlhttp://www.rivm.nl/bibliotheek/rapporten/249109001.html
dc.subject16nl
dc.subject91-3nl
dc.subjectmelknl
dc.subjectweidegrasnl
dc.subjectradioactiviteitnl
dc.subjectmonitoringnl
dc.titleControle op de radioactieve besmetting van "industriemelk" uit Noord-, Oost-, Zuid- en West-Nederland en van gras en melk in de omgeving van nucleaire installaties in 1989nl
dc.title.alternativeMonitoring of radioactivity in "industrial milk" from the northern, eastern, southern and western parts of the Netherlands as well as in pasture grass and milk from the vicinity of nuclear installations in 1989en
dc.typeReport
dc.date.updated2012-12-12T13:40:36Z
html.description.abstractAbstract niet beschikbaar
html.description.abstractMeasurements of the concentrations in pasture and milk samples from the surroundings of nuclear installations gave for 1989 the following average values in pasture: Be-7: 83 +- 6 Bq/kg, K-40: 900 +- 50 Bq/kg, Sr-90: 1,9 +- 0,4 Bq/kg, Cs-137: 2,9 +- 0,6 Bq/kg. Sr-89, I-131 and Cs-134 were below the limit of detection. Rest-beta-activity and rest-gamma-activity in pasture were mostly below the limit of detection. The concentration of the stabile Ca was found to be 4,4 +- 0,2 g/kg. Average concentrations in milk were: for Sr-90: 0,031 +- 0,002 Bq/L and for Cs-137: 0,16 +- 0,05 Bq/L. Be-7, Sr-89, I-131 and Cs-134 were below the limit of detection. In the national milk samples, representative for the northern, eastern, southern and western parts of the Netherlands, average concentrations were: Sr-90: 0,04 +-0,01 Bq/L and Cs-137: 0,24 +- 0,01 Bq/L. Sr-89, I-131 and Cs-134 were not detectable. From the analysis follows that the detected radionuclides which are of artificial origin are due to global fallout from nuclear tests during the sixties and Chernobyl. Concentrations in pasture as well as in milk are almost equal to pre-Chernobyl values. Only Cs-137 concentrations in pasture are still clearly higher.


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