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PAPERS

RECONSTRUCTION OF THE INGESTION DOSES RECEIVED BY THE POPULATION EVACUATED FROM THE SETTLEMENTS IN THE 30-KM ZONE AROUND THE CHERNOBYL REACTOR

Pröhl, Gerhard*; Mück, Konrad; Likhtarev, Ilya; Kovgan, Lina; Golikov, Vladislav§

Author Information

*GSF-National Research Center for Environment and Health, D-85764 Neuherberg, Germany;Austrian Research Center Seibersdorf, A-2444 Seibersdorf, Austria;Ukrainian Radiation Protection Institute, Kiev, Ukraine;§Institute of Radiation Hygiene, St. Petersburg, Russia.

Manuscript received 13 April 2000;

revised manuscript received 28 March 2001, accepted 22 August 2001

For correspondence or reprints contact: K. Mück, Department of Nuclear Safety & Public Protection, Austrian Research Center Seibersdorf, Seibersdorf A-2444, Austria, or email at[email protected].

Abstract

As a consequence of the Chernobyl accident, about 50,000 people were evacuated from the settlements in the 30-km zone around the reactor in the period 3–11 d after the accident. As no countermeasures were implemented in the early phase, people continued to consume milk and some leafy vegetables. In this paper, average effective ingestion doses are modeled for evacuees. Input data for the assessment are the137Cs activity per unit area, the ratios of the radionuclides relative to137Cs, the mean day of evacuation, and intake rates for milk and green vegetables. The transfer of radionuclides from deposition to humans is estimated by modeling radionuclide interception by vegetation, weathering, and the time-dependent transfer of radionuclides to milk taking into account site-specific agricultural practices. Depending on the evacuation day and site, the estimated ingestion doses for the settlements are in the range of 20 to 1,300 mSv and 3 to 180 mSv for infants and adults, respectively.131I is by far the most important isotope, the ingestion dose due to133I is more than one order of magnitude lower. The most exposed organ is the thyroid, inducing more than 80% and 50% of the ingestion dose for infants and adults. The ingestion doses are compared to the doses due to inhalation and external exposure. The internal dose exceeds the external by a factor of about 2–10 for adults and 2–40 for 1-y-old infants depending on site and evacuation day. The thyroid doses assessed for the evacuees are consistent with results achieved in studies performed in areas outside the 30-km zone.

©2002Health Physics Society

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