Natural and anthropogenic radioactivity of feedstuffs, mosses and soil in the belgrade environment, Serbia

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Abstract

By gamma spectroscopic measurement a content of natural radio-nuclides (40K, 238U, 226Ra, 232Th) and 137Cs was determined in samples of soil, alfalfa, maize and moss on six sites in the surroundings of Belgrade. Natural radionuclides in the soil were at the level characteristic for Serbia, whereas a relatively high level of activity of 137Cs (around 30 Bq kg-1) was determined. On the other hand, in plant samples mostly used as feed (such as alfalfa and maize) the concentration of natural radio-nuclide activity and 137Cs was relatively low, i.e. below the range of detection. The content of natural radio-nuclides in moss was within the standard range of values specific for Serbia. However, the activity level of 137Cs in moss gathered from the wider area around Belgrade, was high, the highest measured level being in the Avala-Zuce area (158-221 Bq kg-1). Our results show that this radio-nuclide is still present in the living environment of Belgrade even 20 years after the Chernobyl disaster, and that moss is a good indicator of living environment 137Cs contamination.

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APA

Grdović, S., Vitorović, G., Mitrović, B., Andrić, V., Petrujkić, B., & Obradović, M. (2010). Natural and anthropogenic radioactivity of feedstuffs, mosses and soil in the belgrade environment, Serbia. Archives of Biological Sciences, 62(2), 301–307. https://doi.org/10.2298/ABS1002301G

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