Publication | Closed Access
70-Year Anthropogenic Uranium Imprints of Nuclear Activities in Baltic Sea Sediments
40
Citations
52
References
2021
Year
A strongly stratified water structure and a densely populated catchment make the Baltic Sea one of the most polluted seas. Understanding its circulation pattern and time scale is essential to predict the dynamics of hypoxia, eutrophication, and pollutants. Anthropogenic <sup>236</sup>U and <sup>233</sup>U have been demonstrated as excellent transient tracers in oceanic studies, but unclear input history and inadequate long-term monitoring records limit their application in the Baltic Sea. From two dated Baltic sediment cores, we obtained high-resolution records of anthropogenic uranium imprints originating from three major human nuclear activities throughout the Atomic Era. Using the novel <sup>233</sup>U/<sup>236</sup>U signature, we distinguished and quantified <sup>236</sup>U inputs from global fallout (45.4-52.1%), Chernobyl accident (0.3-1.8%), and discharges from civil nuclear industries (46.1-54.3%) to the Baltic Sea. We estimated the total release of <sup>233</sup>U (7-15 kg) from the atmospheric nuclear weapon testing and pinpointed the <sup>233</sup>U peak signal in the mid-to-late 1950s as a potential time marker for the onset of the Anthropocene Epoch. This work also provides fundamental <sup>236</sup>U data on Chernobyl accident and early discharges from civil nuclear facilities, prompting worldwide <sup>233</sup>U-<sup>236</sup>U tracer studies. We anticipate our data to be used in a broader application in model-observation interdisciplinary research on water circulation and pollutant dynamics in the Baltic Sea.
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