Plantings of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) on a waste burial site in the Chernobyl Red Forest was shown to greatly influence the long term redistribution of radioactivity contained in sub-surfaces trenches. After 15 years of growth, aboveground biomass of the average tree growing on waste trench no.22 had accumulated 1.7 times more 137Cs than that of trees growing off the trench, and 5.4 times more 90Sr. At the scale of the trench and according to an average tree density of 3300 trees/ha for the study zone, tree contamination would correspond to 0.024% of the 137Cs and 2.52% of the 90Sr contained in the buried waste material. A quantitative description of the radionuclide cycling showed a potential for trees to annually extract up to 0.8...
A quantitative analysis of 137Cs bioavailability in forest soils in the long term after the Chernoby...
A near surface repository for low and intermediate-level short-lived radioactive waste is being cons...
International audienceAfter foliar interception of radioactive atmospheric fallout by forest trees, ...
Plantings of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) on a waste burial site in the Chernobyl Red Forest was...
Long-term observations on the effects of a fertilization treatment on 137Cs concentrations in forest...
Twenty years after the Chernobyl accident, root uptake from the surface layers of contaminated fores...
Following the Chernobyl reactor fire in April 1986, acute irradiation caused complete decay of pine ...
Abstract. Long-term observations on the effects of a fertilization treatment on 137Cs concentrations...
We used a chronosequence approach to compare the distribution of 137Cs and potassium (K) in the diff...
International audienceThis review article introduces an experimental site located within the Chernob...
International audienceAtmospheric releases of radionuclides (RN) led to the contamination of various...
This study focused on the long-term cycling of radiocaesium in pine forests at Boundary Plantation (...
Radionuclides migrate in the soil in both vertical and horizontal directions. Radionuclide migration...
The consequences of the Chernobyl disaster continue to threaten humans and ecosystems across fallout...
This paper summarizes the data obtained during a period of 3 years in 'in situ' (distribution of the...
A quantitative analysis of 137Cs bioavailability in forest soils in the long term after the Chernoby...
A near surface repository for low and intermediate-level short-lived radioactive waste is being cons...
International audienceAfter foliar interception of radioactive atmospheric fallout by forest trees, ...
Plantings of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) on a waste burial site in the Chernobyl Red Forest was...
Long-term observations on the effects of a fertilization treatment on 137Cs concentrations in forest...
Twenty years after the Chernobyl accident, root uptake from the surface layers of contaminated fores...
Following the Chernobyl reactor fire in April 1986, acute irradiation caused complete decay of pine ...
Abstract. Long-term observations on the effects of a fertilization treatment on 137Cs concentrations...
We used a chronosequence approach to compare the distribution of 137Cs and potassium (K) in the diff...
International audienceThis review article introduces an experimental site located within the Chernob...
International audienceAtmospheric releases of radionuclides (RN) led to the contamination of various...
This study focused on the long-term cycling of radiocaesium in pine forests at Boundary Plantation (...
Radionuclides migrate in the soil in both vertical and horizontal directions. Radionuclide migration...
The consequences of the Chernobyl disaster continue to threaten humans and ecosystems across fallout...
This paper summarizes the data obtained during a period of 3 years in 'in situ' (distribution of the...
A quantitative analysis of 137Cs bioavailability in forest soils in the long term after the Chernoby...
A near surface repository for low and intermediate-level short-lived radioactive waste is being cons...
International audienceAfter foliar interception of radioactive atmospheric fallout by forest trees, ...