Underground production of radionuclides in the Milk River aquifer, Alberta, Canada

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Abstract

Most cosmogenic radionuclides that may be used to estimate groundwater ages in excess of 100 ka are also produced underground byin situ nuclear reactions. Radioactive equilibrium betweenin situ production and decay would be approached within such long residence times. Radionuclide production byin situ nuclear reactions within the groundwater and within its host rock has been calculated theoretically and compared with some measured radionuclide contents of the groundwater. The fractional transfer ofin situ produced37Ar,39Ar and222Rn from rock to groundwater necessary to account for the total measured groundwater contents were found to be similar, although site specific. The implications for radionuclide release mechanisms and for groundwater dating by the use of cosmogenic radionuclides, including those which are applicable for very old groundwaters (36Cl,81Kr,129I), are discussed.

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    Present address: Postgraduate Research Institute for Sedimentology, University of Reading, Reading RG6 2AB, U.K.

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