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1430997 
Journal Article 
Natural-series radionuclides in traditional North Australia Aboriginal foods 
Martin, P; Hancock, GJ; Johnston, A; Murray, AS 
1998 
Yes 
Journal of Environmental Radioactivity
ISSN: 0265-931X
EISSN: 1879-1700 
40 
37-58 
English 
Activity concentrations of the radionuclides 226Ra, 210Pb, 210Po, 238U, 234U, 230Th, 232Th and 227Ac were measured in edible flesh of traditional Aboriginal food items from the Magela and Cooper Creek systems in the tropical Northern Territory of Australia. Fish, buffalo, pig, magpie goose, filesnake, goanna, turtle, freshwater shrimp and freshwater crocodile were studied. Activity concentrations in water were also measured to enable the calculation of concentration ratios (CRs).

For most edible flesh samples, activity concentrations followed the approximate order: 210Po≫226Ra>210Pb>[234U∼238U]>[230Th∼232Th]. The 210Po/210Pb activity ratio was particularly high (greater than 100) for pig flesh. CRs for fish species fall into two groups. Group 1 (bony bream and sleepy cod) had CRs about five times higher than for group 2 (eight other species). CRs for turtle flesh were similar to those for fish in group 1, while those for turtle liver were about a factor of 10 higher. CRs for magpie goose, filesnake, freshwater shrimp, goanna and crocodile flesh were also of the same order as for fish in groups 1 or 2.

Calculations of dose resulting from release of wastewaters from uranium mining operations in the region show that the dominant pathway would be uptake of radionuclides, especially 226Ra, by freshwater mussels, followed by radionuclide uptake by fish. 
Physical Anthropology; Radiation-General; Biochemical Studies-General; Nutrition-General Dietary Studies; Toxicology-Environmental and Industrial Toxicology; Public Health: Environmental Health-Radiation Health 
IRIS
• Uranium
     Toxline
     WOS
     Merged reference set
     Secondary Refinement
          Retained for manual screening
     Additional Resource
          Exposure levels