SCIENCE TECHNOLOGY THE BATTALION Page 5 in Texas i&M researchers investigate coastal uranium pollution - ■«« BY LINDA WANG Special to the Battalion Jie population of Kames County, located on the south- Kulf coast of Texas, north of Corpus Christi, is projected ) increase by more than 87 percent over the next 30 years, lording to data from the Texas State Data Center. PHOTfTvTiDTc... ^—f®/ith such rapid growth, the uncertainty of whether ura- , mm and other toxic elements arc polluting citizens soil and odiiig tlovice in r^ water ' eaves t* 16 door open for serious health risks. ' Hi his is an issue that has not been studied,” said Bruce 1 1 ' ,II1K ' i"aci. Iltmlii lerbcrt, associate professor of environmental geochemistry bou ihcirsf tl^xasA&M. “Iftheir major drinking wells are in peril, we :eed to know about it.” Herbert is leading a team of re- earcliers from Texas A&M and Texas A&M University-Cor- iusChristi on a two-year, $ 130,000 project to survey the ex- ent of uranium contamination along the southern gulf coast iflfexas, where uranium was heavily mined during the ‘60s md ‘70s. 'rt unity tc id lix'us on the individua stow falls backontoasal 'inglv realistic, and the actors e. However, one wishes that HcConaughey’s character cot rn a \v i shy-washy gu\ to forci Me to fall asleep during thislih he average off-season Holh ] e are no great movies without to ha\ e fallen into that H0II 1 n*ni A “hot” metal Unfi 'Hie atural uranium is a silver-colored metal found in rocks . 1 l, tnd soil in the earth. During World War II, when scientists «0Nered uranium s potential as an explosive in nuclear y.,, oombs, the U.S. Department of Energy hired companies, like Chevron and Exxon, to set up and operate mines wherever uranium was found. Most uranium deposits were discovered . : ‘ ' ! \” . in the Rocky Mountain states, such as Colorado, Wyoming vsi.L,pca„ft h[ fc lan(1Utah ' |,l// nuni . ' SB But in 1652. uranium was found in Karnes County, Texas, ■lls -| sion •iiidiencen illlfy Mank, a lundowner in Kames County, remembers when x Sadlv a l5umnulesa|!I''^ lcarncd h|s P ro P ert y was uranium-rich. c h j n ,aH“We didn t know what uranium was,” Mank said. ‘‘We .in\ anenmemovie.Mraim.v ’ nc cast member w ho makesa is 11 was a g° od thin ^” inumli perliirmance—ZaldanaJ Chevron bought 26 of Mank’s 64 acres ot land for $1000 a\ s j va. She is hip. timnyanJ’ m acre and stripped it of its uranium. \ [vet to see more of this lonsi: Following the Three Mile Island nuclear meltdown in hiiic l.ul\. On the oilier hand v 1979, the demise of the nuclear weapons industry was im- . 1 ut i I i 11 and e.iii dance, hut Ik.' ifnenL Uranium prices plummeted, and mines were aban- anh hx'k-a-like will have toa::. doned- 1 >re acting classes to break th- ; | idling act-a-like curse. (Graft By 1984, the uranium mining industry was dead, but its aftennath continues to affect us all. Not a clean process Less than 1 percent of natural uranium, in the stable but radioactive form of uranium-235, can be used to fuel nuclear bombs. The rest is in the unstable, but non-radioactive, form of uranium-238, which breaks down to radon gas and ra dioactive particles. After mining, leftover uranium-238, called tail ings, are ground up and dumped into a tailings pit. Normally, uranium trapped in rocks and soil breaks down slowly, emitting a small, harmless level of “back ground” radiation. But grinding and exposure to natural conditions raises the level 100,000-fold. Long-term exposure to uranium tail ings has been shown to poison livestock and cause genetic damage in people living nearby. “The history of uranium mining is a litany of failure to prevent contamination, and neither the Texas Department of Health nor the Texas Natural Resources Conservation Commission has as much as surveyed the ex tent of contamination,” said state Sen. Carlos F. Truan, who represents Kames County. Extent of contamination The A&M research project will be the first to survey the downstream extent of contamination along the southern gulf coast of Texas. Department of Energy researchers have surveyed and cleaned up areas in the immediate vicinity of the mines. Herbert and his group from College Station will collect, by hand, soil sam ples in areas they believe have high lev els of uranium and other toxic elements found near Texas uranium mines, such as arsenic, molybdenum, selenium and vanadium. Their counterparts in Corpus Christi, who include Patrick Michaud, divi sion di- 4't ~ tor of the Near Shore Research di vision of Texas A&M University- Corpus Christi’s Conrad Blucher Institute for Surveying and Science, and Patrick Louchouam, associate research scientist at the Conrad Blucher Institute, will collect sediment samples from the bottoms of lakes and rivers. “Sediment is a very interesting system because it accu mulates every year,” Louchouam said. “It is like a histori cal record of what happened in the past.” Layers of sediment will be analyzed to see if there is in creased uranium concentration in the layers from the ’60s and ’70s. Because uranium is highly mobile in sediment, Lou- chouarn is looking for a more stable element commonly found with uranium that can be used as a marker. He hopes to find increased levels of the marker in the layers from the ’60s and ’70s. GRAPHIC COURTESY OF RON PARKER, TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY/The Baitalion The Gulf Coast area north of Corpus Christi is the only area in Texas where uranium mining occurred during the ‘60s and ‘70s. Texas A&M researchers are now investigating groundwater pollution. Hexagons represent the sites of former open-pit uranium mines. Michaud said the soil and sediment data they collect will be analyzed and put into a Geographic Information System (GIS), which allows them to map the contami nants and predict where they are going. These results will help watershed management strate gies prevent the release of toxic elements into ground water. The project is being funded by the Texas Advanced Research Program. Even though the project just started, Herbert already has some ideas about what they might find. “I think we’ll find that the concentration of these el ements are pretty low,” Herbert said. “But in some wa tersheds, they will be extremely high, higher than al lowed by law.” (ZoLLege Grads Ybu'tt ^njoy T-,iuivi0 at... IRpNWOOD iviovrz IN BEFORE JUNE 30, 2000 and register to WIN a 9 9 Come...discover (he convenience ol living wiiltin a stone’s throw ol Houston’s premiere shopping district, the Galleria, and the areas’ inlamous nightspots & restaurants... " ' v 4* - ' KLpNWo-oc» frnmmrm. 2-7’4.2. Jezorettd Dr rue T-Tonston, "Texas 77063 Telephone 713-2.66-6060 ironrvood^bradle^apartmenhonnes.coin Located across the street from Rosewood Hospital <§> W estheimer NEED A JOB? 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