kitchen garden
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2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 85-95
Author(s):  
V. P. Ramzaev ◽  
A. N. Barkovsky ◽  
A. A. Bratilova

The article provides results of application of the field (in situ) gamma spectrometry method for carrying out mass monitoring measurements of ambient dose equivalent rate and soil contamination density with 137Cs in kitchen garden plots located in the zone of radioactive contamination after the Chernobyl accident. In 2020 and 2021, 115 private farmsteads in 46 settlements of the Bryansk region were surveyed. At the time of the survey, the officially established average density of soil contamination with 137Cs in the settlements ranged from 27 to 533 kBq/m2 . The field spectra were measured using a portable scintillation gamma-spectrometer-dosimeter. Results of the field measurements and subsequent calculations of soil contamination density with 137Cs in the kitchen gardens were in good agreement with official data on the average soil contamination density with 137Cs in the surveyed settlements. The mean value of the ratio of the experimental data to the official data was 1.04. Individual values of experimental data deviated from corresponding official values by no more than two times. The use of the gamma spectrometry method in situ made it possible: 1) to determine separately values of the ambient dose equivalent rate from 137Cs and from natural radionuclides in the soil, and 2) to estimate the effective external doses to a person who worked in the kitchen gardens. The measured values of ambient dose equivalent rate varied from 17 to 53 nSv/h (mean ± standard deviation = 35 ± 9 nSv/h) for natural radionuclides and from 8 to 432 nSv/h (mean ± standard deviation = 125 ± 91 nSv/h) for 137Cs. The ambient dose equivalent rate from 137Cs normalized to the soil contamination density with 137Cs in the same kitchen garden was in the range of 0.41–0.84 (nSv/h)/(kBq/m2 ) with a mean value of 0.55 (nSv/h)/(kBq/m2 ). If a person stayed in kitchen garden for 840 hours per year, the estimated effective external doses from natural radionuclides and 137Cs were respectively in the range of 0.008–0.025 mSv/year and 0.004–0.20 mSv/year.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 56-65
Author(s):  
V. P. Ramzaev ◽  
A. N. Barkovsky ◽  
A. A. Bratilova

The collection of representative soil samples in the territory of settlements and subsequent measurements of the content of radionuclides in these samples under laboratory conditions (the so-called “ex situ method”) is a generally accepted technology for determining the density of soil contamination with 137Cs in the populated areas contaminated due to the Chernobyl accident. Recently, as a supplement or alternative to the ex situ method, researchers are developing field (in situ) gamma-spectrometry methods. These methods allow determining the density of soil contamination with 137Cs directly on site, without soil sampling and laboratory analysis. At the same time, the in situ methodology has several limitations, the most important of which is a lack of generally recognized metrological basis for measurements and interpretation of results. Hence, before using a particular technique and measuring device for carrying out large-scale in situ measurements, it is necessary to validate (to assess the suitability) of the selected in situ method using an established ex situ method. The aim of this study was to validate the method for determining the density of 137Cs soil contamination in kitchen gardens using the MKS AT6101D spectrometer-dosimeter in situ. The method was recently presented by a Russian-Swedish-Belarusian group of researchers in an article published in the Journal of Environmental Radioactivity (https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvrad.2021.106562). To validate this method, we selected 10 representative kitchen garden plots. The plots were located in six settlements of the Bryansk region in Russia. The territory of the settlements had been heavily contaminated with 137Cs as a result of the Chernobyl accident: the officially established levels of the density of soil contamination by 137Cs ranged from 111 to 511 kBq/m2 in 2017. Field gamma-ray spectra were recorded at a height of 1 m above the ground in the center of kitchen garden plots using the MKS AT6101D device. The measurement duration was in the range of 1207–1801 s (the mean value = 1383 s). Samples of soil in the kitchen gardens were taken layer by layer (with a step of 5 cm) to a depth of 20 cm using a demountable cylindrical sampler. The 137Cs content in each soil layer was determined in the laboratory using a stationary semiconductor gamma spectrometer. The values of the 137Cs contamination density of the sampled soils ranged from 77 to 548 kBq/m2. It was found that the results of the ex situ analyzes of soil samples were in a good agreement with the contamination density values obtained with the in situ method. On average, the difference between two methodologies was 7% (a maximum of 20%). The results of the study confirm that the method proposed by the international group is suitable for determining the density of soil contamination by 137Cs in kitchen gardens in remote period after the Chernobyl accident.


2021 ◽  
pp. 31-31
Author(s):  
Nirbhay Ambasta

Polypogon monspeliensis (L.) Desf. is a common kitchen garden grass belonging to the family Poaceae/ Gramineae (Bor, 1960). In English, it is known as annual beard-grass or rabbitsfoot grass (Hooker, 1896). It is commonly found in Chouparan Block of Hazaribag District, falls under Jharkhand state of India (Singh et al. 2001). It started owering in spring season. The inorescence is so smooth and greenish in colour (see photographs). It is a common weed. In initial stage, the inorescence is not splitted but on maturity it get splitted.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 179-183
Author(s):  
J. Bhuyan ◽  
D K Mohanty ◽  
S. Srichandan ◽  
S. Pal
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