Lethal
legacy of tank-busting uranium dust
Ian
Sample, science correspondent
Wednesday June 27, 2007
The Guardian
Toxic,
radioactive dust released from armour-piercing depleted uranium shells lingers
for decades in the environment and contaminates land far from where it is used,
according to British scientists.
The
finding raises fears that communities living in or returning to war zones may
be forced to live on contaminated ground, in danger of inhaling the substance
or consuming it in food or water supplies.
Hundreds
of tonnes of tank-busting depleted uranium rounds have been fired by British and
American forces in the Balkans and Iraq. On impact the rounds fragment into a
shower of fine particles, which have been linked to medical conditions including
cancer and birth defects.
Scientists
initially suspected that even fine particles of the heavy dust would only cause
contamination over a confined area. But research conducted by a team at Leicester
University found that it can spread nearly 6km and persists in soils for more
than 25 years.
The
team took soil samples from open ground and residential gardens in a suburban
area near Colonie in New York State. During the 1960s and 1970s, the town was
home to a depleted uranium manufacturing plant, which released an estimated five
tonnes of the material into the air.
The
team detected traces of uranium down to 35cm beneath the ground.
Nicholas
Lloyd, a geologist on the team, said: "One of the issues was the realisation
that we really didn't understand what was going to happen to this material when
it gets into the environment.
"What
we've shown is that even though this is a very dense material that you'd expect
to fall out of the air quickly, we can detect it far from the site and it's surviving
more than a quarter of a century later."
Previous
studies have suggested inhaling particles of depleted uranium, which is weakly
radioactive, might increase the risk of lung cancer. The substance has also been
linked to kidney damage.
In
February the Ministry of Defence published medical tests carried out on more than
400 veterans of the Balkans conflict and the first Gulf war, which found none
was contaminated with depleted uranium. Scientific advisers to the veterans claimed
the tests were either conducted too late, or that the uranium particles were still
lodged inside them.
"This
work shows that depleted uranium may not leach out of soils with rain and get
washed away. It means we can't expect that depleted uranium in contaminated areas
of Iraq will just disappear, it's going to persist and that means it could be
re-suspended and breathed in," said Professor Brian Spratt of Imperial College,
London, who chaired a working group on depleted uranium for the Royal Society.