Uranium-series nuclides in the Golden fault, Colorado, U.S.A.: Dating latest fault displacement and measuring recent uptake of radionuclides by fault-zone materials

Applied Geochemistry
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Abstract

Concentrations and isotopic ratios of U, Th and Ra were measured in a fault zone near Golden, Colorado where major displacement occurred between about 190 and 615 ka. Faulting created new surfaces for leaching and provided the pathways for U-rich ground water. Uranium and230Th, the latter produced by the decay of dissolved234U, are adsorbed by fault gouge, hematite-stained sand and brecciated sand- and claystones. The observed U enrichment is as much as six times baseline value and the simultaneous enrichment of230Th is estimated at about ninefold relative to238U. The adsorption of radionuclides chemically analogous to Th, such as Pu (IV) and Np, and237Np decay products, on fault-zone materials would contribute to the immobilization of high-level radioactive waste in the vicinity of a repository in the event of leakage from engineered barriers into fractured rock-mass.

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Uranium-series nuclides in the Golden fault, Colorado, U.S.A.: Dating latest fault displacement and measuring recent uptake of radionuclides by fault-zone materials
Series title Applied Geochemistry
DOI 10.1016/0883-2927(89)90048-6
Volume 4
Issue 2
Year Published 1989
Language English
Publisher Elsevier
Description 6 p.
First page 177
Last page 182
Country United States
State Colorado
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