Anthropogenic 129I, as a long-lived fission product
and volatile radionuclide, can be used to investigate dispersion of
air masses and the deposition of atmospheric pollution. Surface soil
and soil core samples were collected from Northern Xinjiang and analyzed
for 127I and 129I. The results show that 129I/127I atomic ratios in surface soil are inhomogeneous
with a range of (2.07–106) × 10–9, and
the maximum values in each soil core occurred at surface–subsurface
layers (0–15 cm) at undisturbed sites. The dominant source
of 129I in Northern Xinjiang is European nuclear fuel reprocessing
plant (NFRP) releases, accounting for at least 70% of the total inventory;
less than 20% of 129I originates from the global fallout
of atmospheric nuclear weapons tests; less than 10% comes from the
regional deposition of nuclear weapons tests at the Semipalatinsk
site; and the regional deposition from the nuclear weapons tests at
the Lop Nor site is insignificant. The European NFRP-derived 129I was transported to Northern Xinjiang via long-distance
atmospheric dispersion with the westerlies through Northern Eurasia.
The distribution of 129I in the surface soil in Northern
Xinjiang is mainly controlled by topography, wind fields, land utilization,
and vegetation coverage.
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