Dose estimation of radioactivity in groundwater of Srinagar City, Northwest Himalaya, employing fluorimetric and scintillation techniques

In this study, 60 water samples were collected from various water sources that include bore wells, hand pumps and lakes of Srinagar City. Among them, 45 samples were taken from groundwater with depths ranging from 6 to − 126 m and the rest of the 15 samples were collected from surface sources like lakes, rivers and tap water. A gamma radiation survey of the area was carried out prior to collection of water samples, using a gamma radiation detector. A scintillation-based detector was utilized to measure radon, while as LED fluorimetry was employed to assess uranium in water samples. The average uranium concentration was found to be 2.63 μg L−1 with a maximum value of 15.28  μg L−1 which is less than the globally accepted permissible level of 30  µg L−1.222Radon concentration varied from 0.2 to 38.5  Bq L−1 with an average value of 8.9  Bq L−1. The radon concentration in 19 groundwater samples (32% of total sites) exceeded the permissible limits of 11  Bq L−1 set by USEPA. This information could be of vital importance to health professionals in Kashmir who are researching on the incidence of lung cancers in the region given the fact that radon is the second leading cause of lung cancers after smoking worldwide.
Source: Environmental Geochemistry and Health - Category: Environmental Health Source Type: research