Natural radioactivity and element characterization in pit lakes in Northern Sweden
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Abstract
Northern Sweden has been the object of intense metal mining in the last decades producing
several water-filled open-pits, or pit lakes. Most of these pit lakes have been limed to maintain
a good water quality and to prevent generation of acidic water that could leach the
exposed rocks and release metals into water. The aim of this work was to examine the concentration of stable elements and naturally occurring radionuclides in water and sediment
samples from pit lakes originating from non-uranium mining activities in Northern Sweden.
Surface water and surface sediments were collected from 27 pit lakes in Northern Sweden.
Water quality parameters, concentration of stable elements and radionuclides were measured
by a water probe, ICP-MS and XRF, and alpha and gamma spectrometry, respectively.
Furthermore, a multivariate statistical analysis (PCA) was performed on the water
samples and sediments. In general, the quality of the surface water was good, but some
lakes had low pH values (2.5–5.7), and high concentrations of Fe (up to 200 mg/L) and other
metals (e.g. Zn, Cu). When relating the metal concentrations in sediments in pit lakes with
the concentration found in natural lakes, some sites had relatively high levels of Cu, As, Cr
and Pb. The activity concentration of 210Po, and U and Th isotopes in water and sediment
samples were at environmental levels, as was the ambient dose equivalent rate at these
sites (range 0.08–0.14 μSv/h).
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Bibliographic citation
Thomas, R., Mantero, J., Cánovas, C. R., Holm, E., García-Tenorio, R., Forssell-Aronsson, E., & Isaksson, M. (2022). Natural radioactivity and element characterization in pit lakes in Northern Sweden. In A. W. Rate (Ed.), PLOS ONE (Vol. 17, Issue 3, p. e0266002). Public Library of Science (PLoS). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266002












