PLUTONIUM TRANSPORT TO MAN

INTRODUCTION

Preliminary Model

An important goal of the Nevada Applied Ecology Group (NAEG) Plutonium Program
is to evaluate the potential radiological hazard to man due to the presence of
plutonium in various nuclear safety test areas at the Nevada Test Site (NTS).
As the contaminated areas of interest are uninhabited, we have based our
analysis on the assumption that a Standard Man resides in and obtains most of
his food from a plutonium-contaminated area at NTS.

Figure 1 is a diagram of the potential transport pathways considered in the
preliminary planning model. The large square represents an arbitrary boundary
of a contaminated area. Boxes represent the principal ecosystem compartments
of interest, and arrows represent net transport via the pathways indicated.
Arrows which cross the arbitrary boundary represent net transport out of the
system.

In this report, we utilize information provided by other NAEG studies to
develop a plutonium transport model which attempts to characterize the general
behavior of plutonium in a typical NTS ecosystem and provides a basis for
estimating potential rates of plutonium ingestion and inhalation by the hypothetical Standard Man.

The distribution of Pu in the contaminated areas of principal interest at the
NTS has been described by Gilbert et al. (1975).
Present levels of soil
contamination in the areas of interest range from about 1.0 vCi/m? to >6,000 uCi/m?.
Because these levels of soil contamination resulted from nuclear safety tests
carried out from 1954 through 1963, and because current fallout rates are
insignificant compared with existing levels of contamination, Figure 1 shows
no current Pu input to the system.

dose
These estimates of inhalation and ingestion rates provide the input for a
estimation model which is used to calculate potential organ burdens, cumulative
of
ingestion
gugan doses, and dose commitments due to chronic inhalation and
233py, Though several are considered, the preferred dose estimation model is
based entirely on the recommendations and publications of the International
Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP).
Finally, a procedure is described whereby the combined results of the transport
model and the dose estimation model may be applied to the practical problem of
deciding whether and to what extent environmental decontamination might be
required to limit or reduce potential health hazards due to plutonium.
A preliminary model of potential plutonium transport from the environment to
man was introduced during the planning stage of the NAEG plutonium program to
insure consideration of laboratory and field studies which would provide the
data and parameter estimates required for implementation of a more detailed
transport and dose estimation model to be developed later in the program.
Some of the parameters sought at the outset have proved to be elusive or
model
impossible to measure accurately and, consequently, the proposed dynamic
to
has not been fully implemented. This report represents our best effort
the best
judge and interpret the information currently available and to select
The design
available methods for estimating potential intake rates and doses.
parameter
and
of the transport and dose estimation models plus the assumptions
to bea
values selected for their implementation comprise what we believe
method for
reasonable and conservative working hypothesis which provides a
minated
evaluating the potential health hazards associated with plutonium-conta
As a working hypothesis, it is subject to continuing reapareas at the NTS.
subject to unavoidpraisal, and the results or conclusions derived from it are
these uncertainties
able uncertainties. To a considerable extent, however,
to result in overestiare compensated for by conservative assumptions which tend
than underestimates of potential intake rates, organ burdens, and doses rather
mates.

'

Under these conditions, the Pu concentration in soil is the principal factor
forcing the transport system.
Air is contaminated by resuspension of Pu-bearing
soil particles. Vegetation its contaminated internally by root uptake from
soil and externally by deposition of resuspended particles. Pu input to
herbivores is due to ingestion of soil and vegetation and to inhalation.
Pu
could reach man by inhalation of contaminated air, by accidental ingestion of
contaminated soil, and by ingestion of milk or meat (skeletal muscle or internal
organs) from animals raised in the contaminated area. Drinking water for
herbivores and man is assumed to come from deep wells or from sources outside
the contaminated area and to contribute nothing to Pu intakes by herbivores or
by man.
If it could be assumed that (1) the major ecosystem compartments and important
transport pathways are as indicated in Figure 1, (2) the plutonium in each
compartment

the other contents of

the compartment,

ay,

n

n

i#j

iff

ge 7 br agts ~ Yh aba Og
4 =1,2,3...0
where

622

is well mixed with

and

(3)

the net rate of transfer from one compartment to another can be expressed as
the product of a transfer coefficient and the quantity of plutonium in the
transmitting compartment, then the intercompartmental flux of plutonium could
be represented by a system of linear, first order, ordinary differential
equations, the general formula for which is

j is the compartment of reference and all other compartments
are designated 1,

623

@)

Select target paragraph3