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Title: Nuclear-Fuel-Cycle Research Program: availability of geotoxic material

Technical Report ·
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2172/6860088· OSTI ID:6860088

This report represents an analog approach to the characterization of the environmental behavior of geotoxic waste materials (toxic material emplaced in the earth's crust) as drawn from literature on the Oklo natural fission reactors and uranium ore deposits relative to radioactive wastes, and hydrothermal metal ore deposits relative to stable toxic wastes. The natural analog data were examined in terms of mobility and immobility of selected radioactive or stable waste elements and are presented in matrix relationship with their prime geochemical variables. A numerical system of ranking those relationships for purposes of hazard-indexing is proposed. Geochemical parameters (especially oxidation/reduction potential) are apparently more potent mobilizers/immobilizers than geological or hydrological conditions in many, if not most, geologic environments for most radioactive waste elements. Heavy metal wastes, by analogy to hydrothermal ore systems and geothermal systems, are less clear in their behavior but similar geochemical patterns do apply. Depth relationships between geochemical variables and waste element behavior show some surprises. It is significantly indicated that for waste isolation, deeper is not necessarily better geochemically. Relatively shallow isolation in host rocks such as shale could offer maximum immobility. This paper provides a geochemical outline for examining analog models as well as a departure point for improved quantification of geological and geochemical indexing of toxic waste hazards.

Research Organization:
Arizona Univ., Tucson (USA). Engineering Experiment Station
DOE Contract Number:
W-7405-ENG-48
OSTI ID:
6860088
Report Number(s):
UCRL-15506; ON: DE83001498
Resource Relation:
Other Information: Portions of document are illegible
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English