Long-lived Radionuclides in the Surface Environment (LO-RISE)- Mechanistic Studies of Speciation, Environmental Transport and Transfer

Lead Research Organisation: Newcastle University
Department Name: Sch of Natural & Environmental Sciences

Abstract

The impact of radioactivity on humans and the wider environment is controlled by the behaviour of the radionuclides in groundwaters, soils and sediments, and this behaviour is dictated by the quantities of radionuclides, and their chemical forms. We will study some of the radionuclides which are particularly important because they are potentially present in relatively large quantities, are environmentally mobile, and are readily taken up by living organisms. The main radionuclides we are going to study are:

Carbon-14, which occurs in nature, but was produced back in the 1960s and 60s through nuclear weapons testing, and is also present in nuclear wastes; and

Uranium (together with its decay product radium) which is present in nature, and also in some nuclear wastes.

We will use four areas of the UK which contain elevated levels of these radionuclides as our study sites. These are South Terras (an old uranium mine in Cornwall), the Needle's Eye (a uranium mineral vein in SW Scotland), the Esk Estuary in NW England, and offshore sediments in the NE Irish Sea. At these last two sites, the sediments contain elevated levels of radioactivity from authorised Sellafield discharges, mainly in the 1970s.

As well as studying how radioactivity occurs in, and moves through, the soils, waters, plants and (in the offshore sediments) animals, we want to understand the environmental and biological processes which control this movement. To do this, we will do a series of laboratory experiments, looking at the way soil/sediment conditions influence the radionuclide concentrations in solution, the form of the radionuclides in the solution, the way radionuclides are taken up into plants and animals, and the way they are distributed in plant tissues.

We will use the results from our field and laboratory studies to develop and test mathematical models of radionuclide transport and transfer processes. These are important because they allow us to predict behaviour, rather than having to make measurements. These predictive models can be used in assessing environmental impacts, cleaning up contaminated land and predicting the long term impact of radioactive waste disposals.

Planned Impact

The risk of nuclear industry operations is always a major concern. Whether or not these perceptions of risk are justified, they influence the public and decision-makers very heavily. Moreover, there are major uncertainties associated with radioactivity and the environment, which may lead to a very conservative approach to risk. These conservatisms can lead to overestimation of risk, and costly over-engineering of projects. A proportionate understanding of risk in any nuclear programme is therefore essential for public acceptance, political support and proper cost-detriment analysis. Ultimately, the behaviour of radionuclides in the biosphere dictates the radiological risk they represent, and LO-RISE will substantially improve our understanding of this risk, and of conservatisms in risk assessments, so any organisation with responsibilities for assessing or limiting radiological impact will benefit from LO-RISE.

Two distinct groups of beneficiaries can be identified:

1. Government, Industry, and Regulators. Government sets policy for the UK nuclear industry and has clearly stated that the "safety and security of nuclear power is of paramount concern". Our findings will be disseminated both through our project partners and also by LO-RISE academics' involvement in policy and strategy activities, so that LO-RISE will inform and improve policy making. The owners and operators of nuclear licensed sites (NDA, its Site Licence Companies, MOD and its contractors), the implementers of geological disposal (NDA-RWMD); and the nuclear industry regulators (primarily EA in England and Wales, SEPA in Scotland, though ONR may also have an interest), are responsible for delivering Government's policy objectives, and LO-RISE will support development and delivery of Site Lifetime Plans, or equivalent. At the operational level, the nuclear industry relies heavily on a very diverse supply chain. LO-RISE will help these contractors develop and implement improved solutions at the project level, for deployment in the UK and overseas.

2. The Wider Stakeholder Community, and the Public. Even in 'nuclear' communities, new nuclear projects are controversial. This is clearly illustrated by, for example, 'Stop Hinkley' or the controversy around the MRWS process in west Cumbria. Objective research has a vital role in providing trusted information to inform these debates, and LO-RISE will contribute to this through specifically tailored outreach and impact activities.
 
Description used bulk geochemical and microbial community analysis of soils, coupled with X-ray absorption spectroscopy and µ-focus X-ray fluorescence mapping, to gain a mechanistic understanding of the fate of radionuclides transported into organic-rich soils and marine and estuarine sediments. This combinations of geochemistry and microbiology provides profound insights
Exploitation Route We are planning a future NERC grant application entitled 'How do patchiness and microenvironments control soil-plant transfer- the example of radionuclides in the rhizosphere?'
Sectors Energy,Environment

 
Description Fuller et al. data presented at café scientific lecture
First Year Of Impact 2020
Impact Types Cultural

 
Description invited Café Scientific talk at ARC theatre, Stockton (January 2019) -The microbial planet and its amazing genetic and functional diversity: a work in progress. This talk featured LoRise work 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact The socialmedia report - facebook


Cafe Scientifique - Stockton on Tees UK

21 January 2019 at 13:14 ·

This year sees the 15th year of Café Scientifique in Stockton on Tees and we started our season off in style. To a packed house at our January meeting, Newcastle University's reader in geomicrobiology and geosciences Dr Neil Gray told us all about microbes and the tools now being used to look at their genetic diversity, make up and function.

We are seriously outnumbered on this planet by microbes; however, they're so small they can only be seen through a microscope. While there's about 6.5 billion of us, it's estimated that microbes number around 1030 (that's 10 with 30 zeros after it).

Microbes are single-celled organisms which have been around nearly as long as the planet has and are found everywhere; in ice, in rivers and the sea, and the soil and deep subsurface, in animals and on and in us. They're very diverse and they drive the planet's geochemical processes.

Neil took us through the history of when and how microbes were discovered. Dutchman Antonie van Leeuwenhoek was the first to see them through a microscope in 1673. Later scientists like Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch began to understand their role and developed what was called germ theory by infecting healthy animals.

Today there is a modern molecular toolbox which uses DNA and gene sequencing to look at microbes; this has been a fallout from the gene sequencing programme which has made this technique much more accessible and affordable. The issue, if anything, is that we have so much information now that we need to find ways of understanding and interpreting it.

These recent developments have changed the world view of life and diversity. This has led to a reclassification of the living world. We humans along with plants and animals only represent a tiny part of the diversity on the planet. Most branches of the tree of life are microbial.

Microbes have a secret weapon though; they can exchange their genetic information widely which makes them notoriously difficult to characterise as they keep changing what they do. This is why we are having problems with microbial resistance to antibiotics.

Some microbes are capable of 'breathing in' and immobilising what we would consider harmful substances such as toxic metals or are able to eat the toxic chemicals in oil spills breaking them down into harmless substances. Our understanding of the power of these friendly microbes, which constantly fix chemical imbalances on the planet, is just beginning.

There is a constant argument of how much of own bodies are made up of microbes. Currently the view is that around 50 per cent our body's cells are the microbes which live in and on us. This makes us a very sophisticated transport system for the ecosystem of microscopic life which live on and in us. Much of this life thrives in our digestive system, being very helpful in breaking down food into nutrients our bodies can use.

In plants it's now known that ancient microbes now present in the form of 'chloroplasts' living in leaves can photosynthesise light help them to get their energy.

In his department, Neil Gray and his team are using DNA sequencing to look at microbes in soil. Depending on the depth they are found, microbes do different things. If they are on or near the surface they use oxygen. At greater depths they use whatever substances are available to them to survive. These results can be seen in core samples and show up in a rainbow of colours on gene sequencing graphs.

Neil added that we are on the cusp of understanding the diversity of the planet. Neil's presentation was followed with a lively question and answer session which could have gone on all evening, there was so much to discuss.

Thank you for a fascinating talk Neil!

You can find out more about Neil and his work at https://www.ncl.ac.uk/nes/staff/profile/neilgray.html#background

A recent episode of Radio 4's The Infinite Monkey Cage discussed microbes and emerging knowledge about this fascinating subject. You can hear it at https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m0001xqb

A recent BBC news story claims that half our bodies are not human. You can read this at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-43674270
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://m.facebook.com/story.php?story_fbid=2130195433690161&id=649315125111540&__tn__=%2AW-R