4 research outputs found

    Understanding radionuclide migration from the D1225 Shaft, Dounreay, Caithness, UK

    Get PDF
    A 65 m vertical shaft was sunk at Dounreay in the 1950s to build a tunnel for the offshore discharge of radioactive effluent from the various nuclear facilities then under construction. In 1959, the Shaft was licensed as a disposal facility for radioactive wastes and was routinely used for the disposal of ILW until 1970. Despite the operation of a hydraulic containment scheme, some radioactivity is known to have leaked into the surrounding rocks. Detailed logging, together with mineralogical and radiochemical analysis of drillcore has revealed four distinct bedding-parallel zones of contamination. The data show that Sr-90 dominates the bulk beta/gamma contamination signal, whereas Cs-137 and Pu-248/249 are found only to be weakly mobile, leading to very low activities and distinct clustering around the Shaft. The data also suggest that all uranium seen in the geosphere is natural in origin. At the smaller scale, contamination adjacent to fracture surfaces is present within a zone of enhanced porosity created by the dissolution of carbonate cements from the Caithness flagstones during long-term rockwater interactions. Quantitative modelling of radionuclide migration, using the multiphysics computer code QPAC shows the importance of different sorption mechanisms and different mineralogical substrates in the Caithnesss flagstones in controlling radionuclide migration

    Geochemistry and related studies of Clyde Estuary sediments

    Get PDF
    Geochemical and related studies have been made of near-surface sediments from the River Clyde estuary and adjoining areas, extending from Glasgow to the N, and W as far as the Holy Loch on the W coast of Scotland, UK. Multibeam echosounder, sidescan sonar and shallow seismic data, taken with core information, indicate that a shallow layer of modern sediment, often less than a metre thick, rests on earlier glacial and post-glacial sediments. The offshore Quaternary history can be aligned with onshore sequences, with the recognition of buried drumlins, settlement of muds from quieter water, probably behind an ice dam, and later tidal delta deposits. The geochemistry of contaminants within the cores also indicates shallow contaminated sediments, often resting on pristine pre-industrial deposits at depths less than 1 m. The distribution of different contaminants with depth in the sediment, such as Pb (and Pb isotopes), organics and radionuclides, allow chronologies of contamination from different sources to be suggested. Dating was also attempted using microfossils, radiocarbon and 210Pb, but with limited success. Some of the spatial distribution of contaminants in the surface sediments can be related to grain-size variations. Contaminants are highest, both in absolute terms and in enrichment relative to the natural background, in the urban and inner estuary and in the Holy Loch, reflecting the concentration of industrial activity

    Using digital outcrop data to improve CO2 flow simulation at reservoir-caprock interfaces: an example from the Sherwood Sandstone of the Wessex Basin, SW England

    Get PDF
    In many reservoirs, a gap exists in our understanding of rock heterogeneity between small-scale structures seen in core/geophysical logs and the large-scale structures identified in seismic. This gap can be filled using knowledge from outcrop. This talk provides an example of how large coastal outcrops of the Triassic Sherwood Sandstone (Otter Sandstone Formation)Group in southwest England are being used to increase our understanding of CO2 migration and storage at reservoir-caprock interfaces. Reservoir-caprock boundaries are often modelled as relatively planar surfaces but outcrop reveals a complex sedimentary architecture which has an impact on CO2 migration and trapping. The talk shows the importance of an integrated use of well geophysics, airborne LIDAR, marine multibeam sonar and terrestrial laser scans in outcrop characterisation
    corecore