Fraction of Buried Fukushima Sediment Uncovered
An international research team reports results of a three-year study of sediment samples collected offshore from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant in a new paper published on 18 August 2015 in the American Chemical Society's journal, Environmental Science and Technology. The research aids in understanding what happens to Fukushima contaminants after they are buried on the seafloor off coastal Japan.
Led by Ken Buesseler, a senior scientist and marine chemist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI), the team found that a small fraction of contaminated seafloor sediments off Fukushima are moved offshore by typhoons that resuspend radioactive particles in the water, which then travel laterally with southeasterly currents into the Pacific Ocean.
Buried in Sediment
Accordig to Mr Buesseler, cesium is one of the dominant radionuclides that was released in unprecedented amounts with contaminated water from Japan's Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant following the 11 March 2011 earthquake and tsunami. A little over 99% of it moved with the water offshore and a very small fraction — less than 1% — ended up on the sea floor as buried sediment.
The team has been looking at the fate of that buried sediment on the continental shelf and tracking how much of that contaminated sediment gets offshore through re-suspension from the ocean bottom. The research team, which included colleagues from the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology and the Japan Atomic Energy Agency, analysed three years’ worth of data collected from time-series sediment traps.
Researchers deployed the pre-programmed, funnel-shaped instruments 115 kilometres (approximately 70 miles) southeast of the nuclear power plant at depths of 500 meters (1,640 feet) and 1,000 meters (3,280 feet). The two traps began collecting samples on 19 July 2011 — 130 days after the 11 March earthquake and tsunami — and were recovered and reset annually.
Peak in Movements During Typhoons
After analysing the data, researchers found radiocesium from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident in the sediment samples along with a high fraction of clay material, which is characteristic of shelf and slope sediments suggesting a near shore source. What this study clearly shows is that the only place that the material in our sediment traps could have come from was the continental shelf and slope buried nearshore. The coastal sediments from the shelf have a unique Fukushima radioactive and mineral signal. The data also revealed that peak movements of the sediments with radiocesium coincided with passing typhoons which likely triggered the resuspension of coastal sediments. Radiocesium was still detected in sediment samples from July 2014.
Slow Movement
According to the researchers, the total transport is small, though it is readily detectable. One percent or less of the contaminated sediment that's moving offshore every year means things aren't going to change very fast. What is buried is going to stay buried for decades to come. And that's what may be contributing to elevated levels of cesium in fish — particularly bottom-dwelling fish off Japan.
While there were hundreds of different radionuclides released from the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant during the disaster, after the initial decay of contaminants with half lives (the time it takes for one half of a given amount of radionuclide to decay) less than days to weeks, much of the attention has remained focused on cesium-137 and-134— two of the more abundant contaminants. Cesium-134 has a half-life of a little over two years, and so any found in the ocean could come only from the reactors at Fukushima. Cesium-137 has a half-life of roughly 30 years and is also known to have entered the Pacific as a result of aboveground nuclear weapons tests in the 1950s and ‘60s, providing a benchmark against which to measure any additional releases from the reactors.
In October, Buesseler and the research team will return to Japan to redeploy more sediment traps. The continued study will help estimate how long it takes to decrease the level of radiocesium in seafloor sediments near the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant.
The research was funded initially by a Rapid Response Grant from the National Science Foundation, and continued for three years through support from the Deerbook Charitable Trust and Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
Image: Researchers deployed time-series sediment traps 115 kilometres (approximately 70 miles) southeast of the nuclear power plant at depths of 500 metres (1,640 feet) and 1,000 metres (3,280 feet). The two traps began collecting samples on 19 July 2011 and were recovered and reset annually. Image courtesy: Makio Honda, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology.