January 28, 2025
Book Chapter

Characterization of a Uranium Groundwater Plume along the Columbia River

Abstract

The 300 Area is adjacent to the Columbia River on the southeastern end of Hanford, approximately one mile north of the city of Richland. Uranium fuel fabrication took place in the 300 Area from 1943 to 1988. In this chapter, the historical waste releases that occurred within the 300 Area of the Hanford Site, and specifically the resulting uranium plume, will be used as a case study. There are 3 different operable units (OU) that were established in the 300 Area for cleanup purposes: The 300-FF-1 OU, 300-FF-2 OU and the 300-FF-5 groundwater OU. To determine the location of contaminant plumes within the Hanford Site’s 300 Area, several puzzle pieces must be put together using multiple resources. The first piece of the puzzle is determining the location and chemistry of waste disposed of in the area. Records beginning in the 1940’s can help piece this information together, and the known waste sites and waste disposed of are an example of that process knowledge. Characterization of the subsurface and groundwater is important to determine where the contaminants are now, and what form they are in. This information can be used to design a remediation strategy, as well as to inform modeling efforts to predict where the contaminants will move to next.

Published: January 28, 2025

Citation

Lawter A.R., and M. Snyder. 2024. Characterization of a Uranium Groundwater Plume along the Columbia River. In Remediation of Legacy Hazardous and Nuclear Industrial Sites: Perspectives from Hanford, edited by S.T. Arm and H.P Emerson. 45 - 62. Boca Raton, Florida:CRC Press. PNNL-SA-181466. doi:10.1201/9781003329213-5

Research topics