A significant amount of artificial radionuclides has been introduced into the environment in the last century during atmospheric nuclear weapons tests and the Chernobyl accident. In this study, we investigated the temporal changes of concentrations and amounts of these radionuclides (Sr-90 and Cs-137) in surface water and river bed sediments.
In order to evaluate the artificial radionuclide contamination diminution, we used and compared two different approaches: using a kinetic equation of the first order and, if needed, dividing the monitored period into two intervals, and in addition expressing the whole process in one equation with a series of exponential functions. Effective ecological halflives were estimated as rates of decrease.
In most cases, the ecological processes were proven to affect the radionuclide removal from the hydrosphere besides their radioactive decay. Furthermore, based on the assessment made, the Sr-90 and Cs-137 data were extrapolated and the radionuclide concentrations, which occurred in the hydrosphere after the fallout deposition in 1986, were estimated.