Abstract— The presence of depleted uranium in the soil of former Yugoslavia after the 1999 conflict raised great public concern all over the world. The so-called Balkan-syndrome is often linked with depleted uranium contamination. An excellent compilation of data about DU and its possible impact on health and environment can be found in the 1999 UNEP report and publications from the Swedish Radiation Protection Institute. Unfortunately, very few systematic and reliable data on the possible depleted uranium concentrations were until now available. Some of these rare data are only available on the web, without adequate information about the experimental procedure used. To clarify the situation, a systematic survey was started in the summer of 2000 as a collaborative effort between Ghent University (Physics Laboratory) and the Belgian Ministry of Defense (Medical Service). From 50 sites selected all over Kosovo, 150 soil samples were measured in the laboratory with a high-resolution gamma-spectrometer. Some sites (14) were explicitly selected based on military information on the use of depleted uranium munitions in the vicinity. After careful analysis we can conclude that there is no indication of any depleted uranium contamination on these 50 sites with a minimal detectable activity of 15 Bq; this corresponds approximately to 1 mg depleted uranium in a typical sample (100–150 g).
[1]
J. Buysse,et al.
Survey of the 137Cs contamination in Belgium by in-situ gamma spectrometry, a decade after the Chernobyl accident.
,
1997,
Health physics.
[2]
A. C. Nzuruba.
Evaluation of absolute gamma ray emission probabilities in the decay of
,
1999
.
[3]
J. Cooper.
Factors determining the ultimate detection sensitivity of Ge(Li) gamma-ray spectrometers
,
1970
.
[4]
M. Shoji,et al.
A convenient method for discriminating between natural and depleted uranium by gamma-ray spectrometry.
,
2001,
Applied radiation and isotopes : including data, instrumentation and methods for use in agriculture, industry and medicine.
[5]
A. Poffijn,et al.
Considerations on the Use of High Resolution Gamma Spectrometry in Environmental Measurements
,
1990
.