Because potential Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORMs) generated
from oil and gas extractions in Albania have been disposed without regulatory
criteria in many decades, an extensive survey in one of the most productive
regions (Vlora-Elbasan) has been performed. Among 52 gamma-ray spectrometry
measurements of soil, oil-sand, sludge, produced water and crude oil samples,
we discover that relatively low activity concentrations of 226Ra, 228Ra, 228Th
and 40K, which are 23 +/- 2 Bq/kg, 23 +/- 2 Bq/kg, 24 +/- 3 Bq/kg and 549 +/-
12 Bq/kg, respectively, come from oil-sand produced by hydrocarbon extraction
from molasses formations. The mineralogical characterization together with the
228Ra/40K and 226Ra/40K ratios of these Neogene deposits confirm the geological
and geodynamic model that predicts a dismantling of Mesozoic source rocks. The
average activity concentrations (+/- standard deviations) of the radium
isotopes (226Ra, 228Ra) and of the 228Th and 40K radionuclides in soil samples
are determined to be 20 +/- 5 Bq/kg, 25 +/- 10 Bq/kg, 25 +/- 9 Bq/kg and 326
+/- 83 Bq/kg, respectively. Based on these arguments, the future radiological
assessment of other fields in the region can be strategically planned focusing
on the oil-sands from molasses sediments. No disequilibrium in the 228Ra decay
segment has been observed in soil, sludge and oil-sand samples within the
standard uncertainties. After a detailed radiological characterization of the
four main oilfields, we can conclude that the outdoor absorbed dose rate never
exceeds the worldwide population weighted average absorbed dose rate in outdoor
air from terrestrial gamma radiation.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables, Chemosphere 201