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The source of radium in anomalous accumulations near sandstone escarpments,Australia
Affiliation:1. Lithosphere Fluid Research Laboratory, Department of Petrology and Geochemistry, Eötvös Loránd University, Pázmány Péter sétány 1/C, 1117, Budapest, Hungary;2. Department of Earth, Environment and Resources Sciences, University of Naples Federico II, Via Cintia snc, 80126, Naples, Italy;3. Department of Chemistry, Szent István University, Páter Károly utca 1, 2103, Gödöllő, Hungary;4. Department of Applied Chemistry, Szent István University, Villányi út 35-43, 1118, Budapest, Hungary;5. State Key Laboratory for Environmental Geochemistry, China Academy of Sciences, 550081, 99 Linchengxi Road, Guiyang, Guizhou, China;6. Institute for Earth Sciences, China University of Geosciences (Beijing), No. 29, Xueyuan Road, Haidian District, Beijing, China
Abstract:The source of Ra has been determined in water samples from four areas in Australia where anomalously high surface concentrations of226Ra have accumulated from groundwaters. All four anomalies were located adjacent to sandstone formations, and the groundwaters, which were generally all acidic and low in dissolved salts, appeared to be meteoric water with short ground-residence times. Uranium,226Ra and228Ra concentrations of waters feeding the anomalous areas were comparable to those found in standing waters within the sandstones. The226Ra/228Ra isotopic ratios were distributed about a median of 1.1 which suggests that the waters are in contact with rocks with near-normal U/Th ratios and, hence, that the Ra in the anomalies was derived from within the sandstones.The presence of the short-lived Ra isotopes,223Ra and224Ra, in high concentrations in most spring waters feeding these anomalies suggests that Ra enters groundwaters by recoil following alpha decay of a precursor parent radionuclide within mineral grains. Thus, although three of the areas were considered prospective for U, the radioactive anomalies studied appear to be due to natural transfer of Ra from the sandstones to the surface environment. In no case were the anomalies related to nearby known or undiscovered U deposits. Accordingly, a geochemical procedure, which includes Ra isotopic measurements, is recommended for evaluating radioactive anomalies for U exploration. This procedure should enable selection of only those anomalies with the highest potential for further exploration by more expensive techniques.
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