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University Cooperative Extension of Chemung County |
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Radon is a colorless, odorless radioactive gas that occurs naturally from the decay of uranium and radium. Within the past few years, high levels of radon have been found in homes in the United States. Indoor radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the United States and the leading cause among non-smokers. Protect your family, and test your home.
Cornell Cooperative Extension of Chemung County has free printed radon material available and Radon Test Kits available for $10.00. If you have any questions, please call 734 4453, or stop by our office
at 425 Pennsylvania Avenue, Elmira.
Radon entry into buildings In constructing a house with a basement, a hole is dug, footings are set, and coarse gravel is usually laid down as a base for the basement slab. Then once the basement walls have been built, the gap between the basement walls and the ground outside is filled with material that often is more permeable than the original ground. This filled gap is called a disturbed zone. Radon moves into the disturbed zone and the gravel bed underneath from the surrounding soil. The backfill material in the disturbed zone is commonly rocks and soil from the foundation site, which also generate and release radon. The amount of radon in the disturbed zone and gravel bed depends on the amoount of uranium present in the rock at the site, the type and permeability of soil surrounding the disturbed zone and underneath the gravel bed, and the soil's moisture content. The air pressure in the ground around most houses is often greater than the air pressure inside the house. Thus, air tends to move from the disturbed zone and gravel bed into the house through openings in the house's foundation. All house foundations have openings such as cracks, utility entries, seams between foundation materials, and uncovered soil in crawl spaces and basements.
Radon gets in through:
Because radon is a gas, it has much greater mobility than uranium and radium, which are fixed in the solid matter in rocks and soils. Radon can more easily leave the rocks and soils by escaping into fractures and openings in rocks and into the pore spaces between grains of soil. The ease and efficiency with which radon moves in the pore space or fracture effects how much radon enters a house. If radon is able to move easily in the pore space, then it can travel a great distance before it decays, and it is more likely to collect in high concentrations inside a building. The method and speed of radon's movement through soil is controlled by the amount of water present in the pore space (the soil moisture content), the percentage of pore space in the soil (the porosity), and the "interconnectedness" of the pore spaces that determines the soil's ability to transmit water and air, called soil permeability. Radon moves more rapidly through permeable soils, such a coarse sand and gravel, than through impermeable soils, such as clays. Fractures in any soil or rock allow radon to move more quickly. Some radon atoms remain trapped in the soil and decay to form lead; other atoms escape quickly into the air. Radon in water moves slower than radon in air. The distance that radon
moves before most of it decays is less than 1 inch in water-saturated
rocks or soils, but it can be more than 6 feet, and sometimes tens of
feet, through dry rocks or soils. Because water also tends to flow much
more slowly through soil pores and rock fractures than does air, radon
travels shorter distances in wet soils than in dry soils before it decays.
For these reasons, homes in areas with drier, high permeable soils and
bedrock, such as hill slopes, mouths and bottoms of canyons, coarse glacial
deposits, and fractured or cavernous bedrock, may have high levels of
indoor radon. Even if the radon content of the air in the soil or fracture
is in the "normal" range (200-2,000 pCi/L), the permeability
of these areas permits radon-bearing air to move greater distances before
it decays, and thus contributes to high indoor radon.
Studies of the geology of radon include research into how uranium and radon sources are distributed in rocks and soils, how radon forms in rocks and soils, and how radon moves. Studying how radon enters buildings from the soil and through the water system is also an important part of the geology of radon.
The three major rock types |
Links - EPA: Radon |
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Cornell Cooperative Extension of Chemung County Human Resources Center, 425 Pennsylvania Avenue, Elmira, NY 14904 Phone 607 734 4453 | Fax 607 734 7740 |
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