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Nutrient and trace elements in soil and desert vegetation of southern Idaho
Authors:Susan K. Rope  W. John Arthur III  Timothy H. Craig  Erica H. Craig
Affiliation:(1) U.S. Department of Energy, Radiological and Environmental Sciences Laboratory, 83402 Idaho Falls, Idaho, USA;(2) Northwest Nazarene College, 83615 Nampa, Idaho, USA;(3) Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action Project, U.S. Department of Energy, Albuquerque Operations Office, 87115 Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
Abstract:Concentrations of thirty elements were measured in strong-acid extracts of soil, sagebrush (Artemisia tridentata spp.) leaves and perennial grass from the Idaho National Engineering Laboratory (INEL) and two reference sites in southern Idaho. A bicarbonate-chelating extract of soil was used to estimate plant-available concentrations. The results provide baseline data prior to start-up of a coal-fired steam generation facility on the INEL and other developments in the region. In addition, existing impact from effluents from thirty years of a nuclear fuel reprocessing facility on the INEL was evaluated. Based on the spatial distribution of element concentrations, as well as comparison with references sites, we conclude that concentrations of Zn, and perhaps Ni, Cd, and V, are currently elevated around the fuel reprocessing facility. The spatial distribution of these elements is similar to that of 137Cs in soil, a radionuclide which is emitted by the facility. Sagebrush and soil appear more responsive than perennial grass for long-term monitoring of element concentrations in this semi-arid environment.
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