Uranium in the environment refers to the science
of the sources, environmental behaviour and effects of actinides in
Earth's environment and in animals (including humans). This page is
a subpage of
actinides in
the environment.
Occurrence
From the land

Uranium ore
Uranium is a naturally occurring element found in low levels within
all rock, soil, and water. This is the highest-numbered element to
be found naturally in significant quantities on earth. According to
the
United Nations the normal
concentration of uranium in soil is 300 μg kg
−1 to
11.7 mg kg
−1. (United Nations Scientific Committee
on the Effects of Atomic Radiation, 1993, Report to the General
Assembly, with scientific annexes, New York)
It is considered to be more plentiful than
antimony,
beryllium,
cadmium,
gold,
mercury,
silver, or
tungsten and is about as abundant as
arsenic or
molybdenum. It is found in many minerals
including
uraninite (most common uranium
ore),
autunite,
uranophane,
torbernite,
and
coffinite. Significant concentrations
of uranium occur in some substances such as
phosphate rock deposits, and minerals such as
lignite, and
monazite sands in uranium-rich
ores (it is recovered commercially from these
sources).
From the sea
Seawater contains about 3.3 parts per billion of uranium by weight
(3.3 µg/kg)
[304735] as uranium(VI) forms soluble
carbonate complexes. The extraction of uranium
from seawater has been considered as a means of obtaining the
element.
Sources
Note that uranium is present in most soils at a low concentration,
so the mere fact that a soil contains uranium does not mean that it
has been artificially contaminated by uranium. While it is possible
to use the
isotope signature to
identify the origin of uranium in a sample, for instance
236U is only formed in nuclear reactors fueled with
235U, but the
238U/
235U ratio
should be used with some caution.
In Africa a set of
natural
nuclear fission reactors
operated in one uranium rich area, the Oklo
region in
Gabon.
Metal
Munitions
See also Depleted
uranium#Safety and environmental issues and Depleted uranium#Health
Concerns
The potential danger of exposure to
depleted uranium has received widespread
publicity because of the use of DU munitions in the 1991
Gulf War and 1999
Kosovo
War, as well as current conflicts "A total of just over 290
metric tons of DU projectiles were fired by the US during the Gulf
War (comapred [
sic] to 9 tons in Kosovo and 3 tons in
Bosnia and Herzegovina)." The potential long-term effects on people
living in areas where DU munitions were used has also caused some
concern.
Fragments from projectile DU munitions could cause substantial
inhalation exposure risks in certain circumstances if the exposure
was high.
Studies by the University of
Denver
conclude that there is no risk of radiological
effects on humans from DU munitions. However, there exists
evidence that the
density of uranium
particles may lead to a variety of health effects. Uranium is a
pyrophoric metal, which causes an
incendiary affect in DU weapons, but also scatters the inert
uranium 238 isotope into the air. DU exists normally in our
environment. We eat it and breathe it in trace amounts on a daily
basis. However, in areas where DU weapons have been used, uranium
saturation can be dangerous. Because uranium is so heavy, the human
body is poor at removing it. If inhaled in large amounts, it can
cause
respiratory arrest and is
difficult to remove. If ingested, the
kidneys filter uranium from the blood, and expel it
in urine, but because of the difficulty of removing the large atom,
it tends to accumulate more quickly than it is removed in areas of
high concentrations of DU. Because of the weight of the atom, some
believe this puts dangerous strain on kidney functions, and can
lead to kidney failure.
Air crashes
Uranium metal, as depleted uranium, has been used in aircraft for
trim weights in the past (although the practice has been
discontinued), so after an air crash a release of uranium or its
combustion products is possible.
Dispersion of uranium metal
- "The most important concern is the potential for future
groundwater contamination
by corroding penetrators (ammunition tips made out of DU). The
munition tips recovered by the UNEP team had already decreased in
mass by 10-15% in this way. This rapid
corrosion speed underlines the importance of monitoring the
water quality at the DU sites on an annual basis."
Combustion
Studies of depleted uranium aerosol exposure suggest that uranium
combustion product particles would quickly settle out of the air
[304740] and thus could not affect populations
more than a few kilometers from target areas.
[304741]
The U.S. has admitted that there have been over 100 "friendly fire"
incidents in which members of the U.S. military have been struck by
DU munitions, and that an unknown number have been exposed to DU
via inhalation of combustion products from burning DU
munitions.
Corrosion
It has been reported that the corrosion of uranium in a silica rich
aqueous solution forms both
uranium
dioxide and uranium trioxide.
In pure water,
schoepite
{(UO
2)
8O
2(OH)
12.12(H
2O)}
is formed in the first week and then after four months
studtite
{(UO
2)O
2·4(H
2O)} was formed. A
report on the corrosion of uranium metal has been published by the
Royal Society.
Uranium
metal reacts with
water to form
hydrogen gas,
this reaction forms
uranium dioxide
and 2 to 9%
uranium hydride. It is
important to note that the rate of corrosion due to water is far
greater than that caused by oxygen at temperatures around 100 °C.
At pH values below 2 the corrosion rate at 100 °C goes down
greatly, while as pH values go from 7 upwards the corrosion rate
declines. Gamma irradiation has little effect on the corrosion
rate..
Oxygen gas inhibits the corrosion of uranium by water. .
Compounds
From uranium mining
During the extraction of uranium ore and its processing, some
releases of uranium occur. The releases of
radium and other decay products of uranium are
normally more important than the uranium in tailings ponds at the
mines and ore processing centers.
See Uranium mining for further
details.
From highly active waste in the form of glass
Note that while the vast majority of the uranium is removed by
PUREX nuclear
reprocessing, a small amount of uranium is left in the
raffinate from the first cycle of the PUREX
process. In addition because of the decay of the transplutonium
minor actinides and the residual
plutonium in the waste the concentration
of uranium will increase on the waste. This will occur on a time
scale of hundreds and thousands of years.
The waste
from PUREX processing of used nuclear fuel is handled by vitrification, in the west it is converted
into a borosilicate glass while
in the former soviet
bloc it is
converted into a phosphate
glass. The glass formed when placed in water will
dissolve very slowly,
[304742] according to the
ITU it will require about 1 million years for 10% of the
glass to dissolve in water.
See nuclear waste for more
details.
From spent fuel
Spent
uranium dioxide fuel is very
insoluble in water, it is likely to release uranium (and
fission products) even more slowly than
borosilicate glass when in contact with water.
Behaviour in soil
A study
has been done in the USA
on the chemical form of uranium in soil, this was
published by Benjamin C. Bostick, Scott Fendorf, Mark O.
Barnett, Phillip M. Jardine and Scott C. Brooks in Soil Science
Society of America Journal 66:99-108 (2002)
[304743].
It has been suggested that it is possible to form a
reactive
barrier by adding something to the soil which will cause the
uranium to become fixed. One method of doing this is to use a
mineral (
apatite)
[304744] while a second method is to add a food
substance such as
acetate to the soil. This
will enable bacteria to reduce the uranium (VI) to uranium (IV)
which is much less soluble.
In
peat like soils the uranium will tend to bind
to the humic acids, this tends to fix
the uranium in the soil.[304745] A report on the binding of uranium,
other radioactive metals and non radioactive metal to humic acid
has been published by the INE (German nuclear
engineering research center) at FZK (Karlsruhe
) has been published.[304746] also see the paper by S. Pompe, K.
Schmeide, M. Bubner, G. Geipel, K.-H. Heise, G. Bernhard and H.
Nitsche in
Radiochimica Acta, 2000,
88,
553-558 in which the effect of the
phenol
groups in the humic acid upon the binding of the uranium are
studied. A series of papers have been written on
coordination polymers or uranium(VI)
with poly
carboxylates, these have been
used as models for the uranyl complexes of the humic acids.
For instance see G. Micera
et al.,
Inorganica Chimica
Acta, 1985,
109, 135-139 which is a paper
about the coordination of uranium to 2,6-di
hydroxybenzoate which is a
carboxylic acid which has
phenolic groups
close to the
carboxylic acid
group.

2,6-dihydroxybenzoic acid
Some other work on the binding of
actinides
with
aromatic carboxylates has been
reported. A paper on the binding of
neptunium(V) {
neptunyl}
with
benzene-1,2,4,5-tetracarboxylic acid
has been reported by F. Nectoux
et al.,
Journal of the
Less-Common Metals, 1984,
97, 1-10.

Benzene-1,2,4,5-tetracarboxylic
acid
A
PhD thesis on the interactions of
uranium with
Boom Clay has been
published.
[304747]
It is interesting to note that A. Rossberg, L. Baraniak, T. Reich,
C. Hennig, G. Bernhard and H. Nitsche,
Radiochimica Acta,
2000,
88, 593-597 describes an
EXAFS study of the interactions of uranium with the
degradation products of
wood such as
protocatechuic acid
(3,4-dihydroxy-benzoic acid),
catechol
(2-hydroxyphenol),
pyrogallol
(1,2,3-trihydroxybenzol), and
vanillic
acid (4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzoic acid).
Health effects
Soluble uranium salts are
toxic, though less
so than those of other heavy metals such as
lead or
mercury. The
organ which is most affected is the
kidney.
Soluble uranium salts are readily excreted in the
urine, although some accumulation in the kidneys does
occur in the case of chronic exposure. The
World Health Organization has
established a daily "tolerated intake" of soluble uranium salts for
the general public of 0.5 μg/kg body weight (or 35 μg for
a 70 kg adult): exposure at this level is not thought to lead
to any significant kidney damage.
[304748]
The
antidote for uranium in humans is
bicarbonate, this is used because
uranium(VI) forms complexes with
carbonate. An alternative is to use Tiron (O.
Braun, C. Contino, M.-H. Hengè, E. Ansoborlo and B. Pucci,
Analusis, 1999,
27, 65-68.
[304749]).
An article on the design of new actinide
antidotes can be read at
Chemical Reviews,
2003,
103, 4207-4282.
Humans
Studies have shown that the use of DU ammunition has no measurable
detrimental health effects, either in the short or long term.
The
International Atomic Energy
Agency
reported in 2003 that, "based on credible
scientific evidence, there is no proven link between DU exposure
and increases in human cancers or other significant health or
environmental impacts."[304750]
Gulf War syndrome
A two year
study headed by Al Marshall of Sandia National
Laboratories
analyzed some health effects associated with
accidental exposure to depleted uranium during the 1991 Gulf War, but did not consider any nonradiological
reproductive toxicity, developmental toxicity, or immunological
effects. Marshall’s study concluded that the reports of
serious health risks from DU exposure are not supported by veteran
medical statistics and were consistent with earlier studies form
Los Alamos and the New England Journal of Medicine.
[304751]
In the
Balkans war zone, an absence of
problems is seen by some as evidence of DU muntions' safety:
"Independent investigations by the World Health Organization,
European Commission, European Parliament, United Nations
Environment Programme, United Kingdom Royal Society, and the Health
Council of the Netherlands all discounted any association between
depleted uranium and leukemia or other medical problems."
[304752]
However in 2004, the UK Pensions Appeal Tribunal Service granted a
single disability claim to a Gulf War soldier who attributed his
aching joints and children's health problems to depleted uranium.
This claim was vigorously disputed by the
MoD.
[304753]
[304754]
Some studies have indicated that DU passes into humans more easily
than previously thought after battlefield use.
[304755] [304756]
Birth defects
Most scientific studies have found no link between uranium and
birth defects, but some claim statistical correlations between
soldiers exposed to DU, and those who were not, concerning
reproductive abnormalities.
One study concluded that epidemiological evidence is consistent
with an increased risk of birth defects in the offspring of persons
exposed to DU.
[304757] Environmental groups and others have
expressed concern about the health effects of depleted
uranium,
[304758] and there is some debate over the
matter. Some people have raised concerns about the use of this
material, particularly in munitions, because of its
mutagenicity,
[304759] teratogenicity in mice,
[304760][304761] and neurotoxicity
[304762] and its suspected carcinogenic
potential. Additional concerns address unexploded DU munitions
leeching into groundwater over time.
[304763].
Several sources have attributed the increase in the rate of birth
defects in the children of
Gulf War
veterans and in Iraqis to depleted uranium inhalation
exposure,
[304764][304765] A 2001 study of 15,000 February 1991
U.S. Gulf War combat veterans and 15,000 control veterans found
that the Gulf War veterans were 1.8 (fathers) to 2.8 (mothers)
times more likely to have children with birth defects.
[304766]In a study of UK troops, "Overall, the
risk of any malformation among pregnancies reported by men was 50%
higher in Gulf War Veterans (GWV) compared with Non-GWVs". The
conclusion of the study stated
" We found no evidence for a
link between paternal deployment to the Gulf war and increased risk
of stillbirth, chromosomal malformations, or congenital
syndromes. Associations were found between fathers'
service in the Gulf war and increased risk of miscarriage and less
well-defined malformations, but these findings need to be
interpreted with caution as such outcomes are susceptible to recall
bias. The finding of a possible relationship with renal
anomalies requires further investigation. There was no
evidence of an association between risk of miscarriage and mothers'
service in the gulf."[304767]
However, as yet, all evidence surrounding DU and birth defects by
credible scientific sources has been deemed circumstantial. There
is as yet no concrete evidence to suggest that direct exposure to
DU is unsafe unless inhaled or ingested.
Animals
It has been reported that uranium has caused
reproductive effects, and other health problems
in
rodents,
frogs and
other animals.
Uranium was shown to have cytotoxic, genotoxic and carcinogenic
effects in animal studies (PMID 7694141, PMID 16283518). It has
been shown in
rodents and
frogs that water soluble forms of uranium are
teratogenic (PMID 16124873, PMID 11738513, PMID
12539863)
Bacterial biochemistry
It has
been shown in some recent work at Manchester
that bacteria can reduce
and fix uranium in soils.[304768]These bacterium change soluble
U(VI) into the highly insoluble complex forming U(IV) ion, hence
stopping
chemical leaching.
See also
References
- Gulf veteran babies 'risk deformities' | Politics |
The Observer
- p68 UNEP study, 2003
- Depleted Uranium
-
http://www.the-conference.com/2003/Gold2003/abstracts/A493.pdf
- http://webmineral.com/data/Schoepite.shtml
- http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/downloaddoc.asp?id=1183
- http://www.royalsoc.ac.uk/downloaddoc.asp?id=1182
- M. McD. Baker, L. N. Less, S. Orman, Trans. Faraday Soc., 1966,
2513-2524 DOI: 10.1039/TF9666202513
- M. McD. Baker, L. N. Less and S. Orman, Transactions of the
Faraday Society, 1966, 62, 2525 - 2530 DOI:
10.1039/TF9666202525
Further reading
- Uranium + water reaction. Part 1.—Kinetics, products and
mechanism M. McD. Baker, L. N. Less, S. Orman, Trans. Faraday Soc.,
1966, 2513-2524 DOI: 10.1039/TF9666202513
- Uranium + water reaction. Part 2.—Effect of oxygen and other
gases, M. McD. Baker, L. N. Less and S. Orman, Transactions of the
Faraday Society, 1966, 62, 2525 - 2530 DOI:
10.1039/TF9666202525.
- Radioactivity, Ionizing Radiation and Nuclear
Energy, by J. Hala and J.D. Navratil.ç
- Martín-Gil J., Martín-Gil F.J, José-Yacamán M., Carapia-Morales
L. and Falcón-Bárcenas T. Microwave-assisted Synthesis of Hydrated
Sodium Uranyl Oxonium Silicate. Polish Journal of
Chemistry. 2005. 79, 1399-1403