The oceanic sediment barrier
- 30 July 1986
- journal article
- Published by The Royal Society in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences
- Vol. 319 (1545) , 115-137
- https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.1986.0090
Abstract
Burial within the sediments of the deep ocean floor is one of the options that have been proposed for the disposal of high-level radioactive waste. An international research programme is in progress to determine whether oceanic sediments have the requisite properties for this purpose. After summarizing the salient features of this programme, the paper focuses on the Great Meteor East study area in the Northeast Atlantic, where most oceanographic effort has been concentrated. The geological, geochemical and geotechnical properties of the sediments in the area are discussed. Measurements designed to determine the rate of pore water movement through the sediment column are described. Our understanding of the chemistry of both the solid and pore-water phases of the sediment are outlined, emphasizing the control that redox conditions have on the mobility of, for example, naturally occurring manganese and uranium. The burial of instrumented free-fall penetrators to depths of 30 m beneath the ocean floor is described, modelling one of the methods by which waste might be emplaced. Finally, the nature of this oceanic environment is compared with geological environments on land and attention is drawn to the gaps in our knowledge that must be filled before oceanic burial can be regarded as an acceptable disposal option.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Consolidation around a point heat sourceInternational Journal for Numerical and Analytical Methods in Geomechanics, 1985
- Modelling radioactive waste disposal by penetrator experiments in the abyssal Atlantic OceanNature, 1984
- Sediment mechanical response due to emplacement of a waste canister∗Marine Geotechnology, 1984
- Analysis of heat and mass transfer in subseabed disposal of nuclear wasteMarine Geotechnology, 1984
- Thermophysical properties of deep ocean sediments?Marine Geotechnology, 1984
- Thermal expansion effects in deep-sea sedimentsNature, 1982
- Geothermal Convection Through Oceanic Crust and Sediments in the Indian OceanScience, 1979
- New evidence for occurrence of debris flow deposits in the deep seaGeology, 1976
- High-level radioactive waste management alternatives. Section 5. Ice sheet disposal. Section 6. Seabed disposalPublished by Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI) ,1974
- In situ Sampler for Marine Sedimentary Pore Waters: Evidence for Potassium Depletion and Calcium EnrichmentScience, 1973