Response of the Black Sea ecosystem to the Chernobyl nuclear accident

The most serious accident in a nuclear power plant to date occurred on April 26, 1986, at Chernobyl (Ukraine). Roughly 2% of the total fallout was deposited in the Black Sea basin. We summarize our views regarding the ecological consequences, based on a collective monograph (Polikarpov et al. 2008:...

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Veröffentlicht in:Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek) 2009-02, Vol.376, p.307-308
Hauptverfasser: Polikarpov, Gennady G., Egorov, Viktor N.
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container_title Marine ecology. Progress series (Halstenbek)
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creator Polikarpov, Gennady G.
Egorov, Viktor N.
description The most serious accident in a nuclear power plant to date occurred on April 26, 1986, at Chernobyl (Ukraine). Roughly 2% of the total fallout was deposited in the Black Sea basin. We summarize our views regarding the ecological consequences, based on a collective monograph (Polikarpov et al. 2008: Radioecological response of the Black Sea to the Chernobyl accident; in Russian). Radionuclide runoff into the Black Sea continues to this day, but long-term radioecological effects are minor, except for increased radionuclide levels in the sediments of several estuaries.
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subjects Aquatic environments
AS WE SEE IT
Estuaries
Freshwater ecosystems
Marine ecosystems
Radiation accidents
Radionuclides
River water
Sea water
Seas
Sediments
title Response of the Black Sea ecosystem to the Chernobyl nuclear accident
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