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Published online 20 November 2007
Published in Vadose Zone J 6:1004-1017 (2007)
DOI: 10.2136/vzj2006.0184
© 2007 Soil Science Society of America
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SPECIAL SECTION: HANFORD SITE

Geochemical Controls on Contaminant Uranium in Vadose Hanford Formation Sediments at the 200 Area and 300 Area, Hanford Site, Washington

James P. McKinleya,*, John M. Zacharaa, Jiamin Wanb, David E. McCreadya and Steven M. Healdc

a Pacific Northwest National Lab., Richland, WA 99354
b Lawrence Berkeley Nation Lab., Berkeley, CA 94720
c Argonne National Lab., Argonne, IL 60439

* Corresponding author (james.mckinley{at}pnl.gov)

Received 20 December 2006.

Long-term historic spills of uranium at the 300 Area fuel fabrication site (58,000 kg of disposed uranium over 32 yr) and at the 200 East Area BX tank farm (7000 kg of spilled uranium in one event), both within the Hanford formation in the Hanford Site, Washington State, were investigated by subsurface sampling and subsequent microscale investigations of excavated samples. The 200 Area sediments contained uranyl silicate mineralization (sodium boltwoodite) in restrictive microfractures in granitic clasts, in the vadose zone over a narrow range in depth. Well logging and column experiments indicated that tank wastes migrated deeper than observed in core samples. The 300 Area sediments included metatorbernite and uranium at low concentrations associated with detrital aluminosilicates, along with other mineral phases that could accommodate uranyl, such as uranophane and calcium carbonate. The association of contaminant uranyl with Hanford formation sediments provided a persistent source of uranium to groundwater. The results of both studies suggest that the formation of secondary solid uranyl-bearing phases influences the subsequent release of uranium to the environment and that our understanding of these processes and individual waste sites is incomplete.

Abbreviations: bgs, below ground surface • EMP, electron microprobe • SEM, scanning electron microscope • TEM, transmission electron microscopy • XMP, X-ray microprobe • XRD, X-ray diffraction




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G. W. Gee, M. Oostrom, M. D. Freshley, M. L. Rockhold, and J. M. Zachara
Hanford Site Vadose Zone Studies: An Overview
Vadose Zone J., November 20, 2007; 6(4): 899 - 905.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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