Spatiotemporal evolution of U and Th isotopes in a mine effluent highly polluted by Acid Mine Drainage (AMD)
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Abstract
The spatiotemporal evolution of both U and Th isotopes in a mine effluent highly polluted by acid mine drainage
(AMD) was evaluated. The acidic tributary, which born from the outflows of an abandoned sulfide mine, flows
into the Odiel River. AMD comprises an important source of natural radionuclides, presenting concentrations of
238U and 232Th, two and four orders of magnitude higher, respectively, than the background values of surface
continental waters. These natural radionuclides behave conservatively along the mine effluent (pH < 2.5)
throughout the hydrological year. Under AMD conditions uranium is in the hexavalent state U(VI) and the main
dissolved species are uranyl sulfate complexes. The polluted tributary has a significant impact on the Odiel River
acidifying its waters during the low flow season and increasing up to one order of magnitude the activity concentrations
of U and Th isotopes. U presented a conservative behavior in the Odiel River during the low flow
season (pH ≈ 3), however it is removed from the liquid phase in the wet season (pH ≈ 6), probably due its
coprecipitation/adsorption onto Al-phases. Th shows a high sensitivity to small increases of pH, and it is strongly
coprecipitated/adsorbed with or onto Fe-oxyhydroxydizes in the river.
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Bibliographic citation
Guerrero, J. L., Suárez-Vaz, N., Paz-Gómez, D. C., Pérez-Moreno, S. M., & Bolívar, J. P. (2023). Spatiotemporal evolution of U and Th isotopes in a mine effluent highly polluted by Acid Mine Drainage (AMD). In Journal of Hazardous Materials (Vol. 447, p. 130782). Elsevier BV. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.130782














