International audienceOnce released into the atmosphere, radionuclide dry deposition represents a major transfer process. It can be accurately characterized by its deposition velocity. However, this parameter is poorly constrained for most radionuclides, including chlorine 36. Chlorine 36 is a radionuclide of cosmogenic and anthropogenic origin. It may be discharged into the environment as gases and/or particles during the decommissioning of nuclear plants and the recycling of nuclear fuels. In this study, chlorine 36 deposition velocities are, for the first time, experimentally determined on grass downwind from the Orano La-Hague plant. The atmospheric chlorine 36 measurements were on average 50 nBq.m − 3 for the gaseous fraction and 19 nB...