© Eric Thayer / Reuters
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Almost 2 million people in California and the
Midwest live on aquifer sites which have up to 180 times the safe level of
uranium, according to a recent study by US researchers. Some 275,000
groundwater samples were taken for evaluation, and it turns out that many
Americans live about a kilometer from wells that are uranium-polluted,
scientists from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln discovered. Seventy-eight
percent of the pollution comes from nitrate, the contaminator deriving from
chemical fertilizers and animal waste. Nitrates oxidize uranium, making it
soluble in groundwater. The aquifers are under the rich soil layer,
which is fertilized by nitrates. That’s when they get to the aquifers.
RT.com report
continues:
"It needs to be
recognized that uranium is a widespread contaminant. And we are creating this
problem by producing a primary contaminant that leads to a secondary one,"
co-author Karrie Weber, assistant professor of biological, earth and
atmospheric sciences at the UNL, said, as quoted in the official press release.
The concentration in
Great Plains (Midwest) measured up to 89 times higher than the standards set by
the Environmental Protection Agency, while California aquifers proved to be
even more contaminated, with 180 times the safe amount of uranium found there.
Drinking of
uranium-polluted water can lead to kidney damage, elevated blood pressure. Food
crops used in nutrition could also become contaminated by accumulating uranium
from the groundwater.
The High Plains
aquifer is the largest in the US, and it gives water to eight states, from
South Dakota to Texas. The Central Valley, in its turn, provides for the
California’s most fertile agricultural regions.
All in all, the two
aquifers in question give water to one sixth of the US cropland.
"When you start
thinking about how much water is drawn from these aquifers, it's substantial
relative to anywhere else in the world. These two aquifers are economically
important -- they play a significant role in feeding the nation -- but they're
also important for health. What's the point of having water if you can't drink
it or use it for irrigation?" researcher Weber said.
The
research was published in the August edition of the ‘Environmental Science and
Technology Letters’ journal. Part of the funding came from the US Geological
Survey.
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