Geodatendienst

Natural Radionuclides in Groundwater (NORM) (WMS)

Beschreibung

Considering water as the primary resource necessary for social life, agriculture, industry, and wealth, the importance of groundwater investigation is clear. Apart from many other pollutants, this work focusses on geogenic uranium (U) and radium (Ra), which both stand for natural radionuclides (NORM) that need to be considered frame of groundwater exploration and monitoring programmes due to their specific mobility and chemo-/radiotoxicity. As investigation of U and – to a lesser extent - Ra is done by an increasing number of scientific working groups, the global dataset is improving continuously. In order to give a summarized overview on available and recent literature, scientific papers, reports, and governmental documents have been reviewed for U-238 mass concentrations and Ra-226 and Ra-228 activity concentrations and collected in tables and global maps. Further natural isotopes of U and Ra have been rarely subject of investigation. The collected data were evaluated and interpreted in frame of an associated scientific publication (see citation). From the available data it can be concluded that high geogenic U occur mainly under oxidizing conditions and carbonate rich groundwater, which might be seen as indicator for elevated U concentrations. Certain geological formations, as for example sedimentary, granitic, and volcanic host rocks, promote high U concentrations in groundwater. For geogenic Ra, the search for definite indications proved difficult, since less clear correlation is given for any observed factor. In a global perspective, the most promising evidence for elevated Ra are highly reducing redox conditions, as well as the occurrence of Fe/Mn mineral phases. Furthermore, barite represents a sink for Ra due to its ability to incorporate Ra isotopes. Dissolution of those mineral phases eventually results in co-dissolution of Ra, when Ra is found in host rocks of investigated aquifers, or downstream of such groundwater reservoirs. Furthermore, cation exchange might enhance Ra mobility process, especially in case of sedimentary aquifers with low sorption capacity and/or aquifers with high salinity. Given those chemical requirements for the occurrence of U and Ra, a negative correlation between mother and daughter nuclide can be established. When knowledge on present geological and geochemical constraints is available, elevated U and Ra concentrations might be predictable, as long as anthropogenic influence is excluded.

Aktualität des Datensatzes

Publikation 01.02.21
Letzte Änderung 22.02.23

Raumbezug

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Geodatensatz
Natural Radionuclides in Groundwater (NORM) Considering water as the primary resource necessary for social life, agriculture, industry, and wealth, the importance of groundwater investigation is clear. Apart from many other pollutants, this work focusses on geogenic uranium (U) and radium (Ra), which both stand for natural radionuclides (NORM) that need to be considered frame of groundwater exploration and monitoring programmes due to their specific mobility and chemo-/radiotoxicity. As investigation of U and – to a lesser extent - Ra is done by an increasing number of scientific working groups, the global dataset is improving continuously. In order to give a summarized overview on available and recent literature, scientific papers, reports, and governmental documents have been reviewed for U-238 mass concentrations and Ra-226 and Ra-228 activity concentrations and collected in tables and global maps. Further natural isotopes of U and Ra have been rarely subject of investigation. The collected data were evaluated and interpreted in frame of an associated scientific publication (see citation). From the available data it can be concluded that high geogenic U occur mainly under oxidizing conditions and carbonate rich groundwater, which might be seen as indicator for elevated U concentrations. Certain geological formations, as for example sedimentary, granitic, and volcanic host rocks, promote high U concentrations in groundwater. For geogenic Ra, the search for definite indications proved difficult, since less clear correlation is given for any observed factor. In a global perspective, the most promising evidence for elevated Ra are highly reducing redox conditions, as well as the occurrence of Fe/Mn mineral phases. Furthermore, barite represents a sink for Ra due to its ability to incorporate Ra isotopes. Dissolution of those mineral phases eventually results in co-dissolution of Ra, when Ra is found in host rocks of investigated aquifers, or downstream of such groundwater reservoirs. Furthermore, cation exchange might enhance Ra mobility process, especially in case of sedimentary aquifers with low sorption capacity and/or aquifers with high salinity. Given those chemical requirements for the occurrence of U and Ra, a negative correlation between mother and daughter nuclide can be established. When knowledge on present geological and geochemical constraints is available, elevated U and Ra concentrations might be predictable, as long as anthropogenic influence is excluded.
Vorschau

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Kontakt

Ansprechpartner

Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe (BGR) Dr. Frank Wagner DE

DETAIL.CUSTODIAN

Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe (BGR)

Fachinformationen

Informationen zum Datensatz

Identifikator c745c969-9dd9-5960-ffea-24ee3bf6e3c6
Fachliche Grundlage EN: Source of the measured values: International publications DE: Quelle der Messwerte: Internationale Fachpublikationen Frank Wagner, Elena Mühr-Ebert, Fabian Köhler, Clemens Walther (2021): Occurrence and spread of geogenic uranium and radium levels in groundwater. Applied Geochemistry (submitted).
Art des Dienstes view
Version OGC:WMS 1.3.0

Operation

Name der Operation Beschreibung der Operation Aufruf der Operation
GetCapabilities https://services.bgr.de/wms/grundwasser/norm/?
GetMap https://services.bgr.de/wms/grundwasser/norm/?

GetCapabilities Dokument

Zusatzinformationen

Konformität

Spezifikation der Konformität Spezifikationsdatum Grad der Konformität Geprüft mit
VERORDNUNG (EG) Nr. 976/2009 DER KOMMISSION vom 19. Oktober 2009 zur Durchführung der Richtlinie 2007/2/EG des Europäischen Parlaments und des Rates hinsichtlich der Netzdienste 20.10.09 siehe dazu die angegebene Durchführungsbestimmung

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Schlagworte

INSPIRE-Themen

Geologie
Geology

GEMET-Concepts

Groundwater
Grundwasser
Hydrogeologie
Hydrogeology

Suchbegriffe

Geogene Hintergrundwerte
Grundwasserbeschaffenheit
NORM
Radium
Uran
Weltweit
infoMapAccessService
worldwide

Informationen zum Metadatensatz

Objekt-ID numis-metadaten-c070e332-b729-4fdc-8c9c-d736c886072a
Aktualität der Metadaten 07.04.25
Sprache Metadatensatz Englisch
XML Darstellung Metadaten als XML herunterladen
Ansprechpartner (Metadatum) geodatenmanagement@bgr.de