1. Airborne radiometric survey of a Chernobyl-contaminated mountain area in Norway - using ground-level measurements for validation.
- Author
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Thørring H, Baranwal VC, Ytre-Eide MA, Rønning JS, Mauring A, Stampolidis A, Drefvelin J, Watson RJ, and Skuterud L
- Subjects
- Cesium Radioisotopes analysis, Chernobyl Nuclear Accident, Norway, Radioactive Hazard Release, Radiation Monitoring, Radioactive Fallout analysis, Soil Pollutants, Radioactive analysis
- Abstract
An airborne radiometric survey can be an efficient way to investigate contamination of large areas after nuclear accidents. In the current study, a helicopter borne gamma ray spectrometry survey was carried out in a vast mountainous area in Norway, where the contamination from the 1986 Chernobyl accident still affects animal husbandry more than 30 years after the fallout occurred. The
137 Cs activity densities provided by the aerial survey was validated using various independent ground-based measurements - including soil samples and in situ measurements (at 1 m above ground). Despite considerable small-scale heterogeneity, demonstrated by the ground-based measurements, strong correlations were obtained between the results from the aerial survey - after introducing more detailed instrument calibration and spectre analysis - and the ground-level data. Adjusted R2 values were around 0.9, and linear correlation coefficients close to unity., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
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