Bulletin of the Geological Society of Finland (Jun 1993)

Indoor radon in houses built on gravel and sand deposits in southern Finland

  • K.-L. Hutri,
  • I. Mäkeläinen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17741/bgsf/65.1.004
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 65, no. 1
pp. 49 – 58

Abstract

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Studies by the Finnish Centre for Radiation and Nuclear Safety (STUK) have shown that, in Finland, indoor radon concentrations are almost twice as high in houses built on sand or gravel as in houses built on other soil types. The aim of this study was to assess the radon risk on eskers, ice-marginal formations, and other gravel and sand deposits on the basis of factors that can be determined from geological maps. Altogether, 514 houses built on gravel and sand deposits were selected for the study from the indoor radon database of STUK. Several geological parameters were determined. Empirical statistical models were used to assess the significance of factors affecting indoor radon in glaciofluvial deposits and the sand-dominant littoral deposits occurring in association with them. A relationship was found between increased indoor radon concentrations and the location of a house on a steep-sided esker, in the southeastern rapakivi granite area and on the upper slope or top of an esker. The steepness of the slope also increased the radon concentration in houses on steep-sided eskers. The effect of the topographic features is due to subterranean air-flows. As estimated from the very sparse till sampling, the elevated uranium concentration increased the indoor radon concentration only in houses built on littoral deposits around eskers and ice-marginal formations.

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