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Figure 2
GENERALIZED GEOLOGIC RADON POTENTIAL OF THE UNITED STATES
by the U.S. Geological Survey
Scale
Continental United States
and Hawaii
500
Geologic Radon
Potential
(Predicted Average
Screening Measurement)
LOW (<2per/L)
MODERATEWARIABLE
HIGH (>4pCI/L)
Miles
6/93
-------
potential and some data are available for each of these factors in every geologic province. The
province boundaries do not coincide with political' borders (county and state) but define areas
of general radon potential. The five factors were assigned, numerical values based on an
assessment of their respective contribution to radon potential, and a confidence level was
assigned to each contributing-variable. The approach'used by USGS to estimate, the radon
potential for each province is described in Part II 01 tms document.
EPA subsequently developed the Map of Radon Zones by extrapolating from the
province level to the county level so that all counties in the U.S. were assigned to one of
three radon zones, EPA assigned each county to a given zone based on its provincial radon
potential. For example, if a county is located within a geologic province that has a predicted
average screening level greater than 4 pCi/L, it was assigned to Zone 1. Likewise, counties
located in provinces with predicted average screening levels > 2 pCi/L and < 4 pCi/L, and
less than 2 pCi/L, were assigned to Zones 2 and 3, respectively.
If the boundaries of a county fall in more than one geologic province, the county was
.assigned to a zone based on the predicted radon potential of the province in which most of
the area lies. For example, if three different provinces cross through a given county, the
county was assigned to the zone representing the radon potential of the province containing
most of the county's land area. (In this case, it is not technically correct to say that the
predicted average screening leveL applies to the entire county since the county falls in
multiple provinces with differing radon potentials.)
Figures 3 and 4 demonstrate an example of how EPA extrapolated the county zone
designations for Nebraska from the USGS geologic province map for the State. As figure 3
shows, USGS has identified 5 geologic provinces for Nebraska. Most of the counties are
extrapolated "straight" froni their corresponding provinces, but there are counties "partitioned"
by several provinces — for example, Lincoln County. Although Lincoln county falls in
multiple provinces, it was assigned to Zone 3 because most of its area falls in the province
with the lowest radon potential.
It is important to note that EPA's extrapolation from the province level to the
county level may mask significant "highs" and "lows" within specific .counties. In other
words, within-county variations in radon potential are not shown on the Map of Radon
Zones. EPA recommends that users who may need to address specific within-county
variations in radon potential (e.g., local government officials considering the
implementation of radon-resistant construction codes) consult USGS' Geologic Radon
Province Map and the State chapters provided with this map for more detailed
information, as well as any locally available data.
Map Validation .
The Map of Radon Zones is intended to represent a preliminary assessment of radon
potential for the entire United States. The factors that are used in this effort —indoor radon
data, geology., aerial radioactivity, soils, and foundation type — are basic indicators for radon
potential. It is important to note, however, that the map's county zone designations are not
"statistically valid" predictions due to the nature of the data available for these 5 factors at the
county level. In order to validate the map in light of this lack of statistical confidence, EPA
conducted a number of analyses. These analyses have helped EPA to identify the best
situations in which to apply the map, and its limitations.
1-5
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Figure 3
Geologic ladon Potential Provinces for Nebraska
Lincoln County
Hiji
Uolctite
Figure 4
NEBRASKA - EPA Map of Radon Zones
Lincoln County
Zone I Zone 2 Zone 3
1-6
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One such analysis involved comparing county zone designations td indoor radon
. measurements from the State/EPA Residential Radon Surveys (SRRS). Screening averages
for counties with at least 100 measurements were compared to the counties' predicted radon
potential as indicated by the Map of Radon Zones. EPA found that 72% of the county
screening averages were correctly reflected by the appropriate zone designations on the Map,
In all other cases, they only differed by 1 zone. .
Another accuracy analysis used the annual average data from the National Residential
Radon Survey (NRRS). The NRRS indicated that approximately 6 million homes in the
United States have annual averages greater than or equal to 4 pCi/L. By cross checking the
county location of the approximately 5,700 homes which participated in the survey, their
radon measurements, and the zone designations for these counties, EPA found that
approximately 3.8 million homes of the 5.4 million homes with radon levels greater than or
equal to 4 pCi/L will be found in counties designated as Zone 1. A random sampling of an
equal number of counties would have only found approximately 1.8 million homes greater
than 4 pCi/L. In other words, this analysis indicated that the map approach is three times
more efficient at identifying high radon areas than random selection of zone designations.
Together, these analyses show that the approach EPA used to develop the Map of
Radon Zones is a reasonable one. In addition, the Agency's confidence is enhanced by results
of the extensive State review process — the map generally agrees with the States' knowledge
of and experience in their own jurisdictions. However, the accuracy analyses highlight two
important points: the fact that elevated levels will be found in Zones 2 and 3, and that there
will be significant numbers of homes with lower indoor radon levels in all of the Zones, For
. these reasons, users of the Map of Radon Zones need to supplement the Map with locally '
available data whenever possible. Although all known "ho.t spots", i.e., localized areas of
consistently elevated levels, are discussed in the State-1
specific chapters, accurately defining the boundaries of the "hot spots" on this scale of map is
not possible at this time Also, unknown "hot spots" do exist.
The Map of Radon Zones is intended to be a starting point for characterizing radon
potential because our knowledge of radon sources and transport is always growing. Although
this effort represents the best data available at this time, EPA will continue to study these
parameters and others such as house construction, ventilation features and meteorology factors
in order to better characterize the presence of radon in U.S homes, especially in high.risk
areas. These efforts will eventually assist EPA in refining and revising the conclusions of the
Map of Radon Zones And although this map is most appropriately used as a targeting tool
by the aforementioned audiences — the Agency encourages all residents to test their homes
for radon, regardless of geographic location or the zone designation of the county in
which they live., Similarly, the Map of Radon Zones should not to be used in lieu of
testing during real estate transactions.
, Review Process , • , .
' • .• ,
• The Map of Radon Zones has undergone extensive review within EPA and outside the
Agency! The Association of American State Geologists (AASG) played an integral role in
this review process. The AASG individual State geologists have reviewed their State-specific
information, the USGS Geologic Radon Province Map, and other materials for their geologic
content and consistency. , .
1-7
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In addition to each State geologist providing technical comments, the State radon
offices were asked to comment on their respective States' radon potential evaluations. In
particular, the States were asked to evaluate the data used to assign their counties to specific
zones. EPA and USGS worked with the States to resolve any issues concerning county zone
designations. In a few cases, States have requested changes in county zone designations. The
requests were based on additional data from the State on geology, indoor radon
measurements, population, etc. Upon reviewing the data submitted by the States, EPA did
make some changes in zone designations. These changes, which do not strictly follow the
methodology outlined in this document, are discussed in the respective State chapters.
EPA encourages the States and counties to conduct further research and data collection
efforts to refine the Map of Radon Zones. EPA would like to be kept informed of any
changes the States, counties,, or others make to the maps. Updates and revisions will be
handled in a similar fashion to the way the map was deyeloped. States should notify EPA of
any proposed changes by forwarding the changes through the Regional EPA offices that are
listed in Part II. Depending on the amount of new information that is presented, EPA will
consider updating this map periodically. The State radon programs should initiate proper
notification of the appropriate State officials when the Map of Radon Zones is released and
when revisions or updates are made by the State or EPA.
1-8
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THE USGS/EPA RADON POTENTIAL ASSESSMENTS: AN-INTRODUCTION
, by • • -_
Linda C.S. Gundersen and R. Randall Schumann
U.S. Geological Survey
and
Sharon W. White
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency *
BACKGROUND ' \ . '
> ' , *
The Indoor Radon Abatement Act of 1988 (15 U.S.C. 2661-2671) directed the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to identify areas of the United States that have the
potential to produce harmful levels of indoor radon. These characterizations were to be based
on both geological data and on indoor radon levels in homes and other structures. The EPA
also was directed to develop model standards and techniques for hew building construction
that would provide adequate prevention or mitigation of radon entry. As part of an
Interagency Agreement between the EPA and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the USGS
has prepared radon potential estimates for the United States. This report is one of ten
booklets that document this effort. The purpose and intended use of these reports is to help
identify areas where states can target their radon program resources, to provide guidance in
selecting the most appropriate building code options for areas, and to provide general
information on radon and geology for each state for federal, state, and municipal officials
dealing with radon issues. These reports are not intended to be used a$ a substitute for
indoor radon testing, 'and they cannot and should not be used to estimate or predict the
indoor radon concentrations of individual homes, building sites, or housing tracts. Elevated
levels of indoor radon have been found in every State, and EPA recommends that all homes
be tested for indoor radon:
Booklets detailing the radon potential assessment for the U.S. have been developed for
each State. USGS geologists are the authors of the geologic radon potential booklets. Each
booklet consists of several components, the first being an overview to the mapping project
(Part I), this, introduction to the USGS assessment (Part II), including a general discussion of
radon (occurrence, transport, etc.), and details concerning the types of data used. The third
component is a summary chapter outlining the general geology and geologic radon potential
of the EPA Region (Part III). The fourth component is an individual chapter for each state
(Part IV). Each state chapter discusses the state's specific geographic setting, soils, geologic
setting, geologic radon potential, indoor radon data, and a summary outlining the radon
potential rankings of geologic areas in the state. A variety of maps are presented in each
•chapter—geologic, geographic, population, soils, aerial radioactivity, and indoor radon data by
county. Finally, the booklets contain EPA's map of radon zones for each state and an
accompanying description (Part V).
Because of constraints on the scales of maps presented in these reports and because the
•smallest units used to present the indoor'radon data are counties, some generalizations have
been made in order to estimate the radon potential of each area. Variations in geology, soil
characteristics, climatic factors, homeowner lifestyles, and other factors that influence radon
concentrations can be quite'large within any particular geologic area, so these reports cannot
be used to estimate or predict the indoor radon concentrations of individual homes or housing
* ,
n-1 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
tracts. Within any area of a given geologic radon potential ranking, there are likely to be
areas where the radon potential is lower or higher than that assigned to the area as a whole,
especially in larger areas such as the large counties in some western states.
In each state chapter, references to additional reports related to radon are listed for the
state, and the reader is urged to consult these reports for more detailed informacion. In most
cases the best sources of information on radon for specific areas are state and local
departments of health, state departments responsible for nuclear safety or environmental
protection, and U.S. EPA regional offices. More detailed information on state or local
geology may be obtained from the state geological surveys. Addresses and telephone
numbers of state radon contacts, geological surveys, and EPA regional offices are listed in
Appendix C at the end of this chapter.
RADON GENERATION AND TRANSPORT IN SOILS
Radon (222Rn) is produced from the radioactive decay of radium (226Ra), which is, in turn,
a product of the decay of uranium (238U) (fig. 1). The half-life of 222Rn is 3.825 days. Other
isotopes of radon occur naturally, but, with the exception of tho'ron (220Rn), which occurs in
concentrations high enough to be of concern in a few localized areas, they are less important
in terms of indoor radon risk because of their extremely short half-lives and less common
occurrence. In general, the concentration and mobility of radon in soil are dependent on
several factors, the most important of which are the soil's radium content and distribution,
porosity, permeability to gas movement, and moisture content. These characteristics are, in ,
turn, determined by the soil's parent-material composition, climate, and the soil's age or
maturity. If parent-material composition, climate, vegetation, age of the soil, and topography
are known, the physical and chemical properties of a soil in a given area can be predicted.
As soils form, they develop distinct layers, or horizons, that are cumulatively called the
soil profile. The A horizon is a surface or near-surface horizon containing a relative
abundance of organic matter but dominated by mineral matter. Some soils contain an E
horizon, directly below the A horizon, that is generally characterized by loss of clays, iron, or
aluminum, and has a characteristically lighter color than the A horizon. The B horizon
underlies the A or E horizon. Important characteristics of B horizons include accumulation of
clays, iron oxides, calcium carbonate or other soluble salts, and organic matter complexes. In
drier environments, a horizon may exist within or below the B horizon that is dominated by
calcium carbonate, often called caliche or calcrete. This carbonate-cemented horizon is
designated the K horizon in modern soil classification schemes. The C horizon underlies the
B (or K) and is a zone of weathered parent material that does not exhibit characteristics of A
or B horizons; that is, it is generally not a zone of leaching or accumulation. In soils formed
'in place from the underlying bedrock, the C horizon is a zone of unconsolidated, weathered
bedrock overlying the unweathered bedrock.
The shape and orientation of soil particles (soil structure) control permeability and affect
water movement in the soil. Soils with blocky or granular structure have roughly equivalent
permeabilities in the horizontal and vertical directions, and air and water can infiltrate the soil
relatively easily. However, in soils with platy structure, horizontal permeability is much
greater than vertical permeability, and air and moisture infiltration is generally slow. Soils
with prismatic or columnar structure have dominantly vertical permeability. Platy and
prismatic structures form in soils with high clay contents. In soils with shrink-swell clays, air
t
II-2 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
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Lead-206
STABLE
Uranlum-238
4.51 billion years
fl"\ProttcBnlum-234
Uranlum-234
247,000 years
J 80,000 years
Radlum-226 fa
1602 years
138.4 days
Figure 1. The uranium-238 decay series, showing the half-lives of elements and thek modes of decay (after Wanty and
Schoen, 1991). a denotes alpha decay, p denotes beta decay. .
-------
and moisture infiltration rates and depth of wetting may be limited when the cracks in the
surface soil layers swell shut. Clay-rich B horizons, particularly those with massive or platy
structure, can form a capping layer that impedes the escape of soil gas to the surface
(Schumann and others, 1992). However, the shrinkage of clays can act to open or widen
cracks upon drying, thus increasing the soil's permeability to gas flow during drier periods.
Radon transport in soils occurs by two processes: (1) diffusion and (2) flow (Tanner,
1964). Diffusion is the process whereby radon atoms move from areas of higher
concentration to areas of lower concentration in response to a concentration gradient. Flow is
the process by which soil air moves through soil pores in response to differences in pressure
within the soil or between the soil and the atmosphere, carrying the radon atoms along with it.
Diffusion is the dominant radon transport process in soils of low permeability, whereas flow
tends to dominate in highly permeable soils (Sextro and others, 1987). In low-permeability
soils, much of the radon may decay before it is able to enter a building because its transport
rate is reduced. Conversely, highly permeable soils, even those that are relatively low in
radium, such as those derived from some types of glacial deposits, have been associated with
high indoor radon levels in Europe and in the northern United States (Akerblom and others, .
1984; Kunz and others, 1989; Sextro and others, 1987). In areas of karst topography formed
in carbonate rock (limestone or dolomite) environments, solution cavities and fissures can
increase soil permeability at depth by providing additional pathways for gas flow.
Not all radium contained in soil grains and grain coatings will result in mobile radon
when the radium decays. Depending on where the radium is distributed in the soil, many of
the radon atoms may remain imbedded in the soil grain containing the parent radium atom, or
become imbedded in adjacent soil grains. The portion of radium that releases radon into the
pores and fractures of rocks and soils is called the emanating fraction. When a radium atom
decays to radon, the energy generated is strong enough to send the radon atom a distance of
about 40 nanometers (1 nm = 10"* meters), or about 2x10"* inches—this is known as alpha
recoil (Tanner, 1980). Moisture in the soil lessens the chance of a recoiling radon atom
becoming imbedded in an adjacent grain. Because water is more dense than air, a radon atom
will travel a shorter distance in a water-filled pore than in an air-filled pore, thus increasing
the likelihood that the radon atom will remain in the pore space. Intermediate moisture levels
enhance radon emanation but do not significantly affect permeability. However, high
moisture levels can significantly decrease the gas permeability of the soil and impede radon
movement through the soil.
Concentrations of radon in soils are generally many times higher than those inside of
buildings, ranging from tens of pCi/L to more than 100,000 pCi/L, but typically in the range
of hundreds to low thousands of pCi/L. Soil-gas radon concentrations can vary in response to
variations in climate and weather on hourly, daily, or seasonal time scales. Schumann and
others (1992) and Rose and others (1988) recorded order-of-magnitude variations in soil-gas
radon concentrations between seasons in Colorado and Pennsylvania. The most important
factors appear to be (1) soil moisture conditions, which are controlled in large part by
precipitation; (2) barometric pressure; and (3) temperature. Washington and Rose (1990)
suggest that temperature-controlled partitioning of radon between water and gas in soil pores
also has a significant influence on the amount of mobile radon in soil gas.
Homes in hilly limestone regions of the southern Appalachians were found to have higher
indoor radon concentrations during the summer than in the winter. A suggested cause for this
phenomenon involves temperature/pressure-driven flow of radon-laden air from subsurface
ff
II-4 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
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solution cavities in the carbonate rock into houses. As warm air enters solution cavities that
are higher on the hillslope than the homes, it cools and settles, pushing radon-laden air From •
lower in the cave or cavity system into structures on the hillslope (Gammage and others,
1993). In contrast, homes built over caves having openings situated below the level of the
home had higher indoor radon levels in the winter, caused by cooler outside air entering the
cave, driving radon-laden air into cracks and solution cavities in the rock and soil, and
ultimately, into homes (Gammage and others, 1993).
RADON ENTRY INTO BUILDINGS
A driving force (reduced atmospheric pressure in the house relative to the soil, producing
a pressure gradient) and entry points must exist for radon to enter a building from the soil.
The negative pressure caused by furnace combustion, ventilation devices, and the stack effect
(the rising and escape of warm air from the upper floors of the building, causing a
temperature and pressure gradient within the structure) during cold winter months are
common driving forces. Cracks and other penetrations through building foundations, sump
holes, and slab-to-foundation wall joints are common entry points.
Radon levels in the basement are generally higher than those on the main floor or upper
floors, of most structures. Homes with basements generally provide more entry points for
radon, commonly have a more pronounced stack effect, and typically have lower air pressure
, relative to the surrounding soil than nonbasement homes. The term "nonbasement" applies to
slab-on-grade or crawl space construction.
METHODS AND SOURCES OF DATA
The assessments of radon potential in the booklets that follow this introduction were
made using five main types of data: (1) geologic (lithologic); (2) aerial radiometric; (3) soil
characteristics, including soil moisture, permeability, and drainage characteristics; (4) indoor
radon data; and (5) building architecture (specifically, whether homes in each area are built
slab-on-grade or have a basement or crawl space). These five factors were evaluated and
integrated to produce estimates of radon potential. Field measurements of soil-gas radon or
soil radioactivity were not used except where such data were available in existing, published
reports of local field studies. Where applicable, such field studies are described in the
individual state chapters. , V
GEOLOGIC DATA . ,
• The types and distribution of lithologic units and other geologic features in an
assessment area are of primary importance in determining radon potential. Rock types that
are most likely to cause indoor radon problems include carbonaceous black shales, glaueonite-
bearing sandstones, certain kinds of fluvial sandstones and fluvial sediments, phosphorites,
chalk, karst-producing carbonate rocks, certain kinds of glacial deposits, bauxite, uranium-rich
granitic rocks, metamorphic rocks of granitic composition, silica-rich volcanic rocks, many
sheared or faulted rocks, some coals, and certain kinds of contact metamorphosed rocks.
Rock types least likely to cause radon problems include marine quartz sands, non-
carbonaceous shales and siltstones, certain kinds of clays, silica-poor metamorphic and
*
II-5 Reprinted from USOS Open-File Report 93-292
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igneous rocks, and basalts. Exceptions exist within these general lithoiogic groups because of
the occurrence of localized uranium deposits, commonly of the hydrothermai type in
crystalline rocks or the "roll-front" type in sedimentary rocks. Uranium and radium are
commonly sited in heavy minerals, iron-oxide coatings on rock and soil grains, and organic
materials in soils and sediments. Less common are uranium associated with, phosphate and
carbonate complexes in rocks and soils, and uranium minerals.
Although many cases of elevated indoor radon levels can be traced to high radium and
(or) uranium concentrations in parent rocks, some structural features, most notably faults and
shear zones, have been identified as sites of localized uranium concentrations (Deffeyes and
MacGregor, 1980) and have been associated with some of the highest reported indoor radon
levels (Gundersen, 1991), The two highest known indoor radon occurrences are associated
with sheared fault zones in Boyertown, Pennsylvania (Gundersen and others, 1988a;,Smith
and others, 1987), and in Clinton, New Jersey (Henry and others, 1991; Muessig and Bell,
1988).
NURE AERIAL RADIOMETRIC DATA
Aerial radiometric data are used to quantify the radioactivity of rocks and soils.
Equivalent uranium (eU) data provide an estimate of the surficial concentrations of radort
parent materials (uranium, radium) in rocks and soils. Equivalent uranium is calculated from
the counts received by a gamma-ray detector from the 1.76 MeV (mega-electron volts)
emission energy corresponding to bismuth-214 (2MBi), with the assumption that uranium and
its decay products are in secular equilibrium. Equivalent uranium is expressed in units of
parts per million (ppm). Gamma radioactivity also may be expressed in terms of a radium
activity; 3 ppm eU corresponds to approximately 1 picocurie per gram (pCi/g) of radium-226.
Although radon is highly mobile in soil and its concentration is affected by meteorological
conditions (Kovach, 1945; Klusman and Jaacks, 1987; Schery and others, 1984; Schumann
and others, 1992), statistical correlations between average soil-gas radon concentrations and
average eU values for a wide variety of soils have been documented (Gundersen and others,
1988a, 1988b; Schumann and Owen, 1988). Aerial radiometric data can provide an estimate
of radon source strength over a region, but the amount of radon that is able to enter a home
from the soil is dependent on several local factors, including soil structure, grain size
distribution, moisture content, and permeability, as well as type of house construction and its
structural condition.
The aerial radiometric data used for these characterizations were collected as part of the
Department of Energy National Uranium Resource Evaluation (NURE) program of the 1970s
and early 1980s. The purpose of the NURE program was to identify and describe areas in the
•United States having potential uranium resources (U.S. Department of Energy, 1976). The
NURE aerial radiometric data were collected by aircraft in which a gamma-ray spectrometer
was mounted, flying approximately 122 m (400 ft) above the ground surface. The equivalent
uranium maps presented in the state chapters were generated from reprocessed NURE data in
which smoothing, filtering, recalibrating, and matching of adjacent quadrangle data sets were
performed to compensate for background, altitude, calibration, and other types of errors and
inconsistencies in the original data set (Duval and others, 1989). The data were then gridded
and contoured to produce maps of eU with a pixel size corresponding to approximately 2.5 x
2.5 km (1.6 x 1.6 mi).
t
"II-6 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
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f HCl't LIKE SPICING Of SU8E AEKiAl SURVEYS
2 KM (1 MILE)
5 EM (3 MILES)
2 t 5 KM
10 IM (6 JULES)
5 * 10 IM
MO DiTA
Hgure 2. Nominal flightHne spacings for NUKE aerial gamma-ray surveys covering the
contiguous United States (from Duval and others, 1990). Rectangles represent I°x2° quadrangles.
-------
Figure 2 is an index map of NUKE 1° x 2° quadrangles showing the flight-line spacing
for each quadrangle. In general, the more,closely spaced the flightlines are, the more area
was covered by the aerial gamma survey, and thus, more detail is available in the data set.
For an altitude of 400 ft above the ground surface and with primary flightline spacing
typically between 3 and 6 miles, less than 10 percent ui the ground surface of the United
States was actually measured by the airborne gamma-ray detectors (Duval and others, 1989), '
although some areas had better coverage than others due to the differences in flight-line
spacing between areas (fig. 2), This suggests that some localized uranium anomalies may not
have been detected by the aerial surveys, but the good correlations of eU patterns with
geologic outcrop patterns indicate that, at relatively small scales (approximately 1:1,000,000
or smaller) the National eU map (Duval and others, 1989) gives reasonably good estimates of
average surface uranium concentrations and thus can assist in the prediction of radon potential
of rocks and soils, especially when augmented with additional geologic and soil data.
The shallow (20-30 cm) depth of investigation of gamma-ray spectrometers, either
ground-based or airborne (Duval and others, 1971; Durrance, 1986), suggests that gamma-ray
data may sometimes underestimate the radon-source strength in soils in which some of the
radionuclides in the near-surface soil layers have been transported downward through the soil
profile. In such cases the concentration of radioactive minerals in the A horizon would be
lower than in the B horizon, where such minerals are typically concentrated. The
concentration of radionuclides in the C horizon and below may be relatively unaffected by
surface solution processes. Under these conditions the surface gamma-ray signal may indicate
a lower radon source concentration than actually exists in the deeper soil layers, which are
most likely to affect radon levels in structures with basements. The redistribution of
radionuclides in soil profiles is dependent on a combination of climatic, geologic, and
geochemical factors. There is reason to believe that correlations of eU with actual soil
radium and uranium concentrations at a depth relevant to radon entry into structures may be
regionally variable (Duval, 1989; Schumann and Gundersen, 1991). Given sufficient
understanding of the factors cited above, these regional differences may be predictable.
SOIL SURVEY DATA
Soil surveys prepared by the U.S. Soil Conservation Service (SCS) provide data on soil
characteristics, including soil-cover thickness, grain-size distribution, permeability, shrink-
swell potential, vegetative cover, generalized groundwater characteristics, and lan'd use. The
reports are available in county formats and State summaries. The county reports typically
contain both generalized and detailed maps of soils in the area.
Because of time and map-scale constraints, it was impractical to examine county soil
reports for each county in the United States, so more generalized summaries at appropriate
scales were used where available. For State or regional-scale radon characterizations, soil
maps were compared to geologic maps of the area, and the soil descriptions, shrink-swell
potential, drainage characteristics, depth to seasonal high water table, permeability, and other
relevant characteristics of each soil group noted. Technical soil terms used in soil surveys are
generally complex; however, a good summary of soil engineering terms and the national
distribution of technical soil types is the "Soils" sheet of the National Atlas (U.S. Department
of Agriculture, 1987),
II-8 Reprinted from USOS Open-File Report 93-292
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Soil permeability is commonly expressed in SCS soil surveys in terms of the speed, in
inches per hour (in/hr), at which water soaks into the soil., as measured in a soil percolation
test. Although in/hr are not truly units of permeability, these units are in widespread use and
are referred to as "permeability" in SCS soil surveys. The permeabilities listed in the SCS
surveys are for water, but they generally correlate well with gas permeability. Because data
. on gas permeability of soils is extremely limited, data on permeability to water is used as a
substitute except in cases in which excessive soil moisture is known to exist. Water in soil
pores inhibits gas transport, so the amount of radon available to a home is effectively reduced
by a high water table. Areas likely to h.ave high water tables include river valleys, coastal
areas, and some areas overlain by deposits of glacial origin (for example, loess).
Soil permeabilities greater than 6.0 in/hr may be considered high, and permeabilities less
than 0.6 in/hr may be considered low in terms of soil-gas transport. Soils with low
permeability may generally be considered to have a lower radon potential than more
permeable soils with similar radium concentrations. Many well-developed soils contain a
clay-rich B horizon that may impede vertical soil gas transport. Radon generated below this
horizon cannot readily escape to the surface, so it would instead tend to move laterally,
. especially under the influence of a negative pressure exerted by a building.
Shrink-swell potential is an indicator of the abundance of smectitic (swelling) clays in a
soil. Soils with a high shrink-swell potential may cause building foundations to crack,
creating pathways for radon entry into the structure. During dry periods, desiccation cracks in
shrink-swell soils provide additional pathways for soil-gas transport, and effectively increase
the gas permeability of the soil. Soil permeability data and soil profile data thus provide
important information for regional radon assessments.
INDOOR RADON DATA
Two major sources of indoor radon data were used. The first and largest source of data is
from the State/EPA Residential Radon Survey (Ronca-Battista and others, 1988; Dziuban and'
others, 1990). Forty-two states completed EPA-sponsored indoor radon surveys between 1986
and 1992 (fig. 3). The State/EPA Residential Radon Surveys were designed to be
comprehensive, and statistically significant at the state level, and were subjected to high levels
of quality assurance and control. The surveys collected screening indoor radon measurements,
defined as 2-7 day measurements using charcoal canister radon detectors placed in the lowest
livable area of the home. The target population for the surveys included owner-occupied
single family, detached housing units (White and others, 1989), although attached structures "
such as" duplexes, townhouses, or condominiums were included in some,of the surveys if they
met the other criteria and. had contact with the ground surface. Participants were selected
randomly from telephone-directory listings. In total, approximately 60,000 homes were tested
in the State/EPA surveys.
The second .source' of indoor radon data comes from residential surveys that have been
conducted in a specific state or region of the country (e.g. independent state surveys or utility
company surveys). Several states, including Delaware, Florida, Illinois, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, New York, Oregon, and Utah, have conducted their own surveys of indoor radon. The
quality and design of a state or other independent survey we discussed and referenced where
the data are used. ' •
II-9 Reprinted froto USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
STATE/EPA RESIDENTIAL RADON
SURVEY SCREENING MEASUREMENTS
o
Estimated Percent of Houses with Screening Levels Greater than 4 pCi/L
5 20 and >
'Ilic States of DIU'l^Nl I.NJ.NY, and UT
have conducted their own surveys. OK &
SO declined to participate in the SRRS.
These results are based on 2-7 day screening
measurements in the lowest livable level and should not
be used to estimate annual averages or health risks.
Figure 3, Percent of homes tested in the State/EPA Residential Radon Survey with screening indoor radon levels exceeding 4 pCi/L.
-------
Data for only those counties with five or more measurements are shown in the indoor
radon maps in the state chapters, although data for all counties with a nonzero'number of
measurements are listed in the indoor radon data tables in each state chapter. In total, indoor
radon data from more than 100,000 homes nationwide were used in the compilation of these
assessments. Radon data from State or regional indoor radon'surveys, public health
organizations, or other sources are discussed in addition to the primary data sources where
they are available. Nearly all of the data used in these evaluations represent short-term (2-7
day) screening measurements from the lowest livable space of the homes. Specific details
concerning the nature and use of indoor radon data sets other than the State/EPA Residential
Radon Survey are discussed in the individual State chapters.
RADON INDEX AND CONFIDENCE INDEX
Many of the geologic methods used to evaluate an area for radon potential require
subjective opinions based on the professional judgment and experience of the individual
geologist. The evaluations are nevertheless based on established scientific principles that are •
universally applicable to any geographic area or geologic setting. This section describes the
methods and conceptual framework used by the U.S. Geological Survey to evaluate areas for
radon potential based on the five factors discussed in the previous sections. The scheme is
divided into two basic parts, a Radon Index (RI), used to rank the general radon potential of
the area, and the Confidence Index (CI), used to express the level of confidence in the
prediction based on the quantity and quality of the data used to make the determination. This
scheme works best if the areas to be' evaluated are delineated by geologically-based
boundaries (geologic provinces) rather than political ones (state/county boundaries) in which
the geology may vary across the area.
Radon Index. Table 1 presents the Radon Index (RI) matrix. The five factors—indoor
radon data, geology, aerial radioactivity, soil parameters, and house foundation type—were
quantitatively ranked (using a point value of 1, 2, or 3) for their respective contribution to
radon potential in a given area. At least some data for the 5 factors are consistently available
for every geologic province. Because each of these main factors encompass a wide variety of
complex and variable components, the geologists performing the .evaluation relied heavily on
their professional judgment and experience in assigning point values'to each category and in
determining the overall radon potential ranking. Background information on these factors is
discussed in more detail in the preceding.sections of this introduction.
Indoor radon was evaluated using unweighted arithmetic means of the indoor radon data
for each geologic area to be assessed. Other expressions of indoor radon levels.in an area
also could have been, used, such as weighted averages or annual averages, but these types of
data were not consistently available for the entire United States at the time of this writing, or
the schemes were not considered sufficient to provide a means of consistent comparison ,
across all areas. For this report, charcoal-canister screening measurement data from the
State/EPA Residential,Radon Surveys and other carefully selected sources were used, as
described in the preceding section. To maintain consistency, other indoor radon data sets ,
(vendor, state, or other data) were not considered in scoring the indoor radon factor of the ,
Radon Index if they were not randomly sampled or could not be statistically combined with
the primary indoor radon data sets. However, these additional radon data sets can provide >a
means to further refine correlations between geologic factors and radon potential, so they are
11-11 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
TABLE 1. RADON INDEX MATRIX, "ppm eU" indicates parts per million of equivalent
uranium, as indicated by NURE aerial radiometric data. See text discussion for details.
FACTOR
INDOOR RADON (average)
AERIAL RADIOACTIVITY
GEOLOGY*
SOIL PERMEABILITY
ARCHITECTURE TYPE
INCREASING RADON POTENTIAL ^
POINT VALUE
1
<2pCi/L
<1.5ppmeU
negative
low
mostly slab
2
2-4pCi/L
1.5 - 2.5 ppm eU
variable
moderate
mixed
3
>4pCi/L
> 2.5 ppm eU
positive
high
mostly basement
*GEOLOGIC FIELD EVIDENCE (GFE) POINTS: GFE points are assigned in addition to points
for the "Geology" factor for specifici relevant geologic field studies. See text for details.
Geologic evidence supporting: HIGH radon +2 points
MODERATE +1 point
LOW -2 points
No relevant geologic field studies 0 points
SCORING:
Radon potential category
Point ranee
Probable average screening
indoor radon for area
LOW 3-8 points <2pCi/L
MODERATE/VARIABLE 9-11 points 2 - 4 pCi/L
HIGH 12-17 points >4pCi/L
POSSIBLE RANGE OF POINTS = 3 to 17
TABLE 2. CONFIDENCE INDEX MATRIX
INCREASING CONFIDENCE *
FACTOR
INDOOR RADON DATA
AERIAL RADIOACTIVITY
GEOLOGIC DATA
SOIL PERMEABILITY
POINT VALUE
1
sparse/no data
questionable/no data
questionable
questionable/no data
2
fair coverage/quality
glacial cover
variable
variable
- 3
good coverage/quality
no glacial cover
proven geol. model
reliable, abundant
SCORING:
LOW CONFIDENCE
MODERATE CONFIDENCE
HIGH CONFIDENCE
4-6 points
7-9 points
10 -12 points
POSSIBLE RANGE OF POINTS = 4 to 12
n-12 Reprinted ftom USGS Open-Ftte Report 93-292
-------
included as supplementary information and are discussed in the individual State chapters. If
the average screening indoor radon level for an area was less than 2 pCi/L, the indoor radon
factor was assigned 1 point, if it was between 2 and 4 pCi/L, it was scored 2 points, and if
*he average screening indoor radon level for an area was greater than 4 pCi/L, *he indoor
radon factor was assigned 3 RI points.
Aerial radioactivity data used in this report are from the equivalent uranium map of the
conterminous United States compiled from NUKE aerial gamma-ray surveys (Duyal and
others, 1989). These data indicate the gamma radioactivity from approximately the upper 30
cm of rock and soil, expressed in. units of ppm equivalent uranium. An approximate average
value of eU was determined visually for each area and point values assigned based on
whether the overall eU for the area falls below 1.5 ppm (1 point), between 1:5 and 2.5 ppm
(2 points), of greater than 2.5 ppm (3 points).
The geolpgy factor is complex and actually incorporates many geologic characteristics: In
the matrix, "positive" and "negative" refer to the presence or absence and distribution of rock
types known to have high uranium contents and to generate elevated radon in soils or indoors.
Examples of, "positive" rock types include granites, black shales, phosphatic rocks, and other
rock types described in the, preceding "geologic data" section. Examples of "negative" rock
types include marine quartz sands and some clays. The term "variable", indicates that the
geology, within the region is variable or that the rock types |n the area are known or suspected
to generate elevated radon in some areas but not in others due to compositional differences,
climatic effects, localized.distribution of uranium, or other factors. Geologic information
indicates not only how much uranium is present in the rocks and soils but also gives clues for
predicting general radon emanation'and mobility characteristics through additional factors
such as structure (notably the presence of faults or shears) and geochemical characteristics
(for example, a phosphate-rich sandstone will likely contain more uranium than a sandstone
containing little or no phosphate because the phosphate forms chemical complexes with
uranium). "Negative", "variable", and "positive" geology were assigned 1, 2, and 3 points,
respectively.
In cases where additional reinforcing or contradictory geologic evidence is available,
Geologic Field Evidence (GFE) points were added to or subtracted from an area's score
(Table 1). Relevant geologic field studies are important to enhancing our understanding of
how geologic processes affect radon distribution. In some cases, geologic models and,
supporting field data reinforced an already strong (high o'r low) score; in others, they provided
important contradictory data. GFE points were applied for geologically-sound evidence that
supports the prediction (but which may contradict one or more factors) on the basis of known
geologic field studies in the area or in areas with geologic and climatic settings similar
enough that they could be applied with full confidence. For example, areas of the Dakotas,
Minnesota, and Iowa that are covered with Wisconsin-age glacial deposits exhibit a l^w aerial
radiometric signature and score only one RI point in that category. However, data from
geologic field studies in North Dakota and Minnesota (Schumann and others, 1991) suggest
that eU is a poor predictor of geologic radon potential in this area because radionuclides have
f - .
*
11-13 Reprinted,from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
been leached from the upper soil layers but are present and possibly even concentrated in
deeper soil horizons, generating significant soil-gas radon. This positive supporting field
evidence adds two GFE points to the score, which helps to counteract the invalid conclusion
suggested by the radiometric data. .No GFE points are awarded if there are no .documented
field studies for the area.
"Soil permeability" refers to several soil characteristics that influence radon concentration
and mobility, including soil type, grain size, structure, soil moisture, drainage, slope, and
permeability. In the matrix, "low" refers to permeabilities less than about 0.6 in/hr; "high"
corresponds to greater than about 6.0 in/hr, in U.S. Soil Conservation Service (SCS) standard
soil percolation tests. The SCS data are for water permeability, which generally correlates
well with the gas permeability of the soil except when the soil moisture content is very high.
Areas with consistently high water tables were thus considered to have low gas permeability.
"Low, "moderate", and "high" permeability were assigned 1, 2, and 3 points, respectively.
Architecture type refers to whether homes in the area have mostly basements (3 points),
mostly slab-on-grade construction (1 point), or a mixture of the'two. Split-level and crawl
space homes fall into the "mixed" category (2 points). Architecture information is necessary
to properly interpret the indoor radon data and produce geologic radon potential categories
that are consistent with screening indoor radon data.
The overall RI for an area is calculated by adding the individual RI scores for the 5
factors, plus or minus GFE points, if any. The total RI for an area falls in one of three
categories—low, moderate or variable, or high. The point ranges for the three categories were
determined by examining the possible combinations of points for the 5 factors and setting
rules such that a majority (3 of 5 factors) would determine the final score for the low and
high categories, with allowances for possible deviation from an ideal score by the other two
factors. The moderate/variable category lies between these two ranges. A total deviation of 3
points from the "ideal" score was considered reasonable to allow for natural variability of
factors—if two of the five factors are allowed to vary from the "ideal" for a category, they
can differ by a minimum of 2 (1 point different each) and a maximum of 4 points (2 points
different each). With "ideal" scores of 5, 10, and 15 points describing low, moderate, and
high geologic radon potential, respectively, an ideal low score of 5 points plus 3 -points for
possible variability allows a maximum of 8 points in the low category. Similarly, an ideal
high score of 15 points minus 3 points gives a minimum of 12 points for the high category.
Note, however, that if both other factors differ by two points from the "ideal", indicating
considerable variability in the system, the total point score would lie in the adjacent (i.e.,
moderate/variable) category.
Confidence Index, Except for architecture type, the same factors were used to establish a
Confidence Index (CI) for the radon potential prediction for each area (Table 2), Architecture
type was not included in the confidence index because house construction data are readily and
reliably available through surveys taken by agencies and industry groups including the
National Association of Home Builders, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development, and the Federal Housing Administration; thus it was not considered necessary
*
11-14 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
to question the quality or validity of these data. The other factors were scored on the basis of
the quality and quantity of the data used to complete the RI matrix.
Indoor radon data were evaluated based on the distribution and number of data points and
on whether the data were collected by random sampling (State/EPA Residential Radon Survey
or other state survey data) or volunteered vendor data (likely to be nonrandom and biased
toward population centers and/or high indoor radon levels). The categories listed in the CI
matrix for indoor radon data ("sparse or no data", "fair coverage or quality", and "good
coverage/quality") indicate the sampling density and statistical robustness of an indoor radon
data set. Data from the State/EPA Residential Radon Survey and statistically valid state
surveys were typically assigned 3 Confidence Index points unless the data were poorly
distributed or absent in the ar/ea evaluated.
Aerial radioactivity data are available for all but a few areas of the continental United
States and for part of Alaska. An evaluation of the quality of the radioactivity data was based
on whether there appeared to be a good correlation between the radioactivity and the actual
amount of uranium or radium available to generate mobile radon in the rocks and soils of the
area evaluated. In general, the greatest problems with correlations among eU, geology, and
, soil-gas or indoor radon levels were associated with glacial deposits (see the discussion in a
previous section) and typically were assigned a 2-point Confidence Index score. Correlations
among eU, geology, and radon were generally sound in unglaciated areas and were usually -
. assigned 3 CI points. Again, however, radioactivity data in some unglaciated areas may have
been assigned fewer than 3 points, and in glaciated areas may be assigned only one point, if
the data were considered questionable or if coverage was poor.
To assign Confidence Index scores for the geologic data factor, rock types and geologic
settings for which a physical-chemical, process-based understanding of radon generation and
mobility exists were regarded as having "proven geologic models" (3 points); a high
confidence could be held for predictions in such areas. Rocks for which the processes are
less well known or for which data are contradictory were regarded as "variable" (2 points),
and those about which little is known or for which no apparent correlations have been found
, were deemed "questionable" (1 point).
The soil permeability factor was also scored based on quality and amount of data. The
three categories for soil permeability in the Confidence Index are similar in concept, and
scored similarly, to those for the geologic data factor. Soil permeability can be roughly
estimated from grain size and drainage class if data from standard, accepted soil percolation
tests are unavailable; however, the reliability of the data would be lower than if percolation
test figures or other measured permeability data are available, .because an estimate of this type
does' not encompass all the factors that affect soil permeability and thus may be inaccurate in
some instances. Most published soil permeability data are for water; although this is
generally closely related to the air permeability of th.4 soil, there are some instances when it
may provide an incorrect estimate. Examples of areas in which water permeability data may
not accurately reflect air permeability include areas with consistently high levels of soil
moisture,, or clay-rich soils, which would have a low water permeability but may have a
t
11-15 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
significantly higher air permeability when dry due to shrinkage cracks 'in the soil. These
additional factors were applied to the soil permeability factor when assigning the RI score, but
may have less certainty in some cases and thus would be assigned a lower CI score.
The Radon Index and Confidence Index give a general indication of the relative
contributions of the interrelated geologic factors influencing radon generation and transport in
rocks and soils, and thus, of the potential for elevated indoor radon levels to occur in a
particular area. However, because these reports are somewhat generalized to cover relatively
large areas of States, it is highly recommended that more detailed studies be performed in
local areas of interest, using the methods and general information in these booklets as a guide.
11-16 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
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•* ' * > ''
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daughters: Radiation Protection Dosimetry, v. 7, p. 49-54.
" - • I
Deffeyes, K.S., and MacGregpr, I.D., 1980, World uranium resources: Scientific American,
v. 242, p. 66-76.
Durrance, E.M., 1986, Radioactivity in geology: Principles and applications: New York, N.Y.,
Wiley and Sons, 441 p. -
Duval, J.S., 1989, Radioactivity and some of its applications in geology: Proceedings of the
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Residential radon survey of twenty-three States, in Proceedings of the 1990 International
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Garrimage, R.B., Wilson, D.L., Saultz, R.J., and Bauer, B.C., 1993, Subtereanean transport of
radon and elevated indoor radon in hilly karst terranes: Atmospheric Environment
(in press). • , ,
Gundersen, L.C.S., Reimer, G.M., and Agard, S.S., 1988a, Correlation between geology, radon
in soil gas, and indoor radon in the Reading Prong, in Marikos, M.A.,, and Hansman,
R.H., eds.j Geologic causes of natural radionuclide anomalies: Missouri Department of
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Gundersen, L.C.S, Reimer, G.M., Wiggs, C.R., and Rice, C.A., 1988b, Map showing radon
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Gundersen, Linda C.S., 1991, Radon in sheared metamorphic and igneous rocks, in Gundersen,
Linda C.S., and Richard B. Wanty, eds., Field studies of radon in rocks, soils, and water:
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H-17 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
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Henry, Mitchell E., Kaeding, Margret E., and Monteverde, Donald, 1991, Radon in soil gas and
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*
Kunz, C., Laymon, C.A., and Parker, C., 1989, Gravelly soils and indoor radon, in Osborne,
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Schumann, R.R., Owen, D.E., and Asher-Bolinder, S., 1992, Effects of weather and soil
characteristics on temporal variations in soil-gas radon concentratidns, in Gates, A.E., and
Gundersen, L.C.S., eds., Geologic controls on radon: Geological Society of America
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Investigations of soil as a source of indoor radon, ,l» Hopke, P.K., ed., Radon and its
decay products: American Chemical Society Symposium Series 331, p. 10-29.
•'..''. " i
Sterling, R., Meixel, G., Shen, L., Labs, K., and Bligh, T,, 1985, Assessment of the energy
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W.M., eds., The natural radiation environment: Chicago, HI., University of Chicago
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and Richard B. Wanty, eds., Field studies of radon in rocks, soils, and water: U.S.
Geological Survey Bulletin no. 1971, p. 183-194.
Washington, J.W., and Rose, A.W., 1990, Regional arid temporal relations of radon in soil gas to
soil temperature and moisture: Geophysical Research Letters, v. 17, p. 829-832.
White, S.B., Bergsten, J.W., Alexander, B.VI, and Ronca-Battista, M., 1989, Multi-State
surveys of indoor 222Rri: Health Physics, v. 57, p. 891-896.
II-19 Reprinted from USGS Open-Ffle Report 93-292
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APPENDIX A
GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE
Subdivisions (and their symbols!
Eon or
Eonothem
Phanerozoic2
Proterozoic
(B)
Archean
IAI
Era or
Erathem
Cenozoic z
(ClI
Mesozoic
(Md
PiliOlOiC1
te.i
iro
-
- w» _,
^«#»e»e« dp
MK»I*
mt»«-ow? f**
£»ny
rotvozO'C fXl
Ui>
Areltun IW1
MteGM
A*th»»R IVJ
fc»»tv
Artn,.n 1U!
Per od. System,
Subperiod, Subsystem
Quaternary
(Q)
Neocene *
Subperiod or
Teniarv Subsyswm (N)
if, P»lt8Btn«
Suboenod or
Subsystem (Pi)
Cretaceous
IK)
Jurassic
UJ ,
Triassic
(T<)
Permian
(P)
Pennsylvania?)
Symtmc _,_,„„ , ,
(C> Mississippian
(M)
Devonian
(D)
Silurian
fCI
Ordovician
tn\
Cambrian
rC)
Epoch or Series
Age estimates
of boundaries
in mega-annurn
(Ma)1
Holocene 1
Pitistocene „ „
Pliocene
Miocene
Oligocene
Eocene
Paleocene
Late
Early
Late
Middle
Early
Late
Middle
Early
Late
Early
Late
Middle
Early
Late
Early
Late
Middle
Early
Late
Middle
Early
Late
Middle
Early
Late
Middle
Early
Upper
Lower
Upper
Middle
Lower
Upper
Middle
Lower
Upper
Lower
Upper
Middle
Lower"
Upper
Lower
Upper
Middle
Lower
Upper
Middle
Lower
Upper
Middle
Lower
Upper
Middle
Lower
, None defined
None defined
None defined
None defined
None defined
None defined
pr*-Areh**n (pA) *
5IA CS_K ^1
. _ Rfi H8i»,,,,CC<
flfin f5Rn_"*R";<
— — itn /jwtv-AjyN
, cnn
-------
APPENDIX B
GLOSSARY OF TEEMS
rTr;ts of measure
pCi/L (picocuries per liter)- a unit of measure of radioactivity used to describe radon
concentrations in a volume of air. One picocurie (10"12 curies) is equal to about 2.2 disintegrations
of radon atoms per minute. A liter is about 1.06 quarts. The average concentration of radon in
U.S. homes measured to date is between 1 and 2 pCi/L,
Bq/m3 (Becquerels per cubic meter)- a metric unit of radioactivity used to describe radon
concentrations in a volume of air. One becquerel is equal to one radioactive disintegration per
second. One pCi/L is equal to 37 Bq/m3.
ppin (parts per million)- a unit of measure of concentration by weight of an element in a
substance, in this case, soil or rock. One ppm of uranium contained in a ton of rock corresponds
to about 0.03 ounces of uranium. The average concentration of uranium in soils in the United
States is between 1 and 2 ppm. .
in/hr (inches per hour)- a unit of measure used by soil scientists and engineers to describe the
permeability of a soil to water flowing through it It is measured by digging a hole 1 foot (12
inches) square and one foot deep, filling it with water, and measuring the time it takes for the water
to drain from the hole. The drop in height of the water level in the hole, measured in inches, is
then divided by the time (in hours) to determine the permeability. Soils range in permeability from
less than 0.06 .in/hr to greater than 20 in/hr, but most soils in the United States have permeabilities
between these two extremes.
Geologic: terms and termsrelated to the study of radon
aerial radiometrie, aeroradiometric survey A survey of radioactivity, usually gamma rays,
taken by an aircraft carrying a gamma-ray spectrometer pointed at the ground surface.
alluvial fan A low, widespread mass of loose rock and soil material, shaped like an open, fan
and deposited by a stream at the point where it flows from a narrow mountain valley out onto a ,
plain or broader valley. May also form at the junction with larger streams or when the gradient of
the stream abruptly decreases. " . '
i s ,
alluvium, alluvial General terms referring to unconsolidated detrital material deposited by a
stream or other body of running water.
alpha-track detector A passive radon measurement device consisting of a plastic film that is
sensitive to alpha particles. The film is etched with acid in a laboratory after it is exposed. The
etching reveals scratches, or "tracks", left by the alpha particles resulting from radon decay, which
can then be counted to calculate the radon concentration. Useful for long-term (1-12 months)
radon tests. ?
amphibolite A mafic metamorphic rock consisting mainly of pyroxenes and(or) amphibole and
plagioclase.
II-21 Reprinted from TJSGS Open-File Reposrt 93-292
-------
argillite, argillaceous Terms referring to a rock derived from clay or shale, or any sedimentary
rock containing an appreciable amount of clay-size material, i.e., argillaceous sandstone.
arid Term describing a climate characterized by dryness, or an evaporation rate that exceeds the
amount of precipitation.
basalt A general term for a dark-colored mafic igneous rocks that may be of extrusive origin,
such as volcanic basalt flows, or intrusive origin, such as basalt dikes.
batholith A mass of plutonic igneous rock that has more than 40 square miles of surface
exposure and no known bottom.
carbonate A sedimentary rock consisting of the carbonate (COs) compounds of calcium,
magnesium, or iron, e.g. limestone and dolomite.
carbonaceous Said of a rock or sediment that is rich in carbon, is coaly, or contains organic
matter.
charcoal canister A passive radon measurement device consisting of a small container of
granulated activated charcoal that is designed to adsorb radon. Useful for short duration (2-7 days)
measurements only. May be referred to as a "screening" test
chert A hard, extremely dense sedimentary rock consisting dominantiy of interlocking crystals of
quartz. Crystals are not visible to the naked eye, giving the rock a milky, dull luster. It may be
white or gray but is commonly colored red, black, yellow, blue, pink, brown, or green.
clastic pertaining to a rock or sediment composed of fragments that are derived from preexisting
rocks or minerals. The most common clastic sedimentary rocks are sandstone and shale.
clay A rock containing clay mineral fragments or material of any composition having a diameter
less than 1/256 mm.
clay mineral One of a complex and loosely defined group of finely crystalline minerals made up
of water, silicate and aluminum (and a wide variety of other elements). They are formed chiefly by
alteration or weathering of primary silicate minerals. Certain clay minerals are noted for their small
size and ability to absorb substantial amounts of water, causing them to swell. The change in size
that occurs as these clays change between dry and wet is referred to as their "shrink-swell"
potential.
concretion A hard, compact mass of mineral matter, normally subspherical but commonly
irregular in shape; formed by precipitation from a water solution about a nucleus or center, such as
a leaf, shell, bone, or fossil, within a sedimentary or fractured rock.
conglomerate A coarse-grained, clastic sedimentary rock composed of rock and mineral
fragments larger than 2 mm, set in a finer-grained matrix of clastic material.
cuesta A hill or ridge with a gentle slope on one side and a steep slope on the other. The
formation of a cuesta is controlled by the different weathering properties and the structural dip of
the rocks forming the hill or ridge.
daughter product A nuclide formed by the disintegration of a radioactive precursor or "parent"
atom.
11-22 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
delta, deltaic Referring to a low, flat, alluvial tract of land having a triangular or fan shape,
located at or near the mouth of a river. It results from the accumulation of sediment deposited by a
river at the point at which the river loses its ability to transport the sediment, commonly where a
river meets a larger body of water such as a lake or ocean.
dike A tabular igneous intrusion of rock, younger than the surrounding rock, that commonly cuts
across the bedding or foliation of the rock it intrudes.
diorite A plutonic igneous rock that is medium in color and contains visible dark minerals that
make up less than 50% of the rock. It also contains abundant sodium plagioclase and minor
quartz.
dolomite A carbonate sedimentary rock of which more than 50% consists of the mineral dolomite
), and is commonly white, gray, brown, yellow, or pinkish in color.
? drainage The manner in which the waters of an area pass, flow off of, or flow into the soil
Also refers to the water features of an area, such as lakes and rivers, that drain it.
eolian Pertaining to sediments deposited by the wind.
esker A long, narrow, steep-sided ridge composed of irregular, beds of sand and gravel deposited
by streams beneath a glacier and left behind when the ice melted.
evapotranspiration Loss of water from a land area by evaporation from the soil and
transpiration from plants; .
extrusive Said of igneous rocks that have been erupted onto the surf ace of the Earth.
fault A fracture or zone of fractures in rock or sediment along which there has been movement
fluvial, fluvial deposit Pertaining to sediment that has been deposited by a river or stream.
foliation A linear feature in a rock defined by both mineralogic and structural characteristics. It
may be formed during deformation of metamorphism.
formation A mappable body of rock having similar characteristics.
glacial deposit Any sediment transported and deposited by a glacier or processes associated
with glaciers, such as glaciofluvial sediments deposited by streams flowing from melting glaciers.
gneiss A rock formed by metamorphism in which bands and lenses of minerals of similar
composition alternate with bands and lenses of different composition, giving the rock a striped or
"foliated" appearance.
granite Broadly applied, any coarsely crystalline, quartz- and feldspar-bearing igneous plutonic
rock. Technically, granites have between 10 and 50% quartz, and alkali feldspar comprises at least
65% of the total feldspar. .
gravel An unconsolidated, natural accumulation of rock fragments consisting predominantly of
particles greater than 2 mm in size.
heavy minerals Mineral grains in sediment or sedimentary rock having higher than average
specific gravity. May form layers and lenses because of wind or water sorting by weight and size
11-23 Reprinted frcmUSGSOpen-FMe Report 93-292
-------
and may be referred to as a "placer deposit" Some heavy minerals are magnetite, garnet, zircon,
monazite, and xenotime.
igneous Said of a rock or mineral that solidified from molten or partly molten rock material. It is
one of the three main classes into which rocks are divided, the others being sedimentary and
metamorphic.
intermontane A term that refers to an area between two mountains or mountain ranges.
intrusion, intrusive The processes of emplacement or injection of molten rock into pre-existing
rock. Also refers to the rock formed by intrusive processes, such as an "intrusive igneous rock".
kame A low mound, knob, hummock, or short irregular ridge formed by a glacial stream at the
margin of a melting glacier; composed of bedded sand and gravel.
karst terrain A type of topography that is formed on limestone, gypsum and other rocks by
dissolution of the rock by water, forming sinkholes and caves.
lignite A brownish-black coal that is intermediate in coalillcation between peat and
subbituminous coal.
limestone A carbonate sedimentary rock consisting of more than 50% calcium carbonate,
primarily in the form of the mineral ealcite (CaCOs).
lithology The description of rocks in hand specimen and in outcrop on the basis of color,
composition, and grain size.
loam A permeable soil composed of a mixture of relatively equal parts clay, silt, and sand, and
usually containing some organic matter.
loess A fine-grained eolian deposit composed of silt-sized particles generally thought to have
been deposited from windblown dust of Pleistocene age.
mafic Term describing an igneous rock containing more than 50% dark-colored minerals.
marine Term describing sediments deposited in the ocean, or precipitated from ocean waters.
metamorphic Any rock derived from pre-existing rocks by mineralogical, chemical, or structural
changes in response to changes in temperature, pressure, stress, and the chemical environment
Phylfite, schist, amphibolite, and gneiss are metamorphic rocks.
moraine A mound, ridge, or other distinct accumulation of unsorted, imbedded glacial material,
. predominantly till, deposited by the action of glacial ice.
outcrop That part of a geologic formation or structure that appears at the surface of the Earth, as
in "rock outcrop".
percolation test A term used in engineering for a test to determine the water permeability of a
soil. A hole is dug and filled with water and the rate of water level decline is measured.
/
permeability The capacity of a rock, sediment, or soil to transmit liquid or gas.
phosphate, phosphatic, phosphorite Any rock or sediment containing a significant amount
of phosphate minerals, i.e., minerals containing PO4.
11-24 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
physiographic province A region in which all parts are similar in geologic structure and
climate, which has had a uniform gedmorphic history, and whose topography or landforms differ
significantly from adjacent regions.
placer deposit See heavy minerals
residual Formed by weathering of a material in place.
residuum Deposit of residual material.
rhyolite An extrusive igneous rock of volcanic origin, compositionally equivalent to granite.
sandstone A clastic sedimentary rock composed of sand-sized rock and mineral material that is
more or less firmly cemented. Sand particles range from 1/16 to 2 mm in size.
schist A strongly foliated crystalline rock, formed by metamorphism, that can be readily split into
thin flakes or slabs. Contains mica; minerals are typically aligned.
screening level Result of an indoor radon test taken with a charcoal canister or similar device,
for a short period of .time, usually less than seven days. May indicate the potential for an indoor
radon problem but does not indicate annual exposure to radon.
sediment Deposits of rock and mineral particles or fragments originating from material that is
transported by air, water or ice, or that accumulate by natural chemical precipitation or secretion of
organisms.
semiarid Refers to a climate that has slightly more precipitation than an arid climate.
shale A fine-grained sedimentary rock formed from solidification (tithification) of clay or mud.
shear zone Refers ,to a roughly linear zone of rock that has been faulted by ductile or non-ductile
processes in which the rock is sheared and both sides are displaced relative to one another.
shrink-swell clay See clay mineral.
siltstone A fine-grained clastic sedimentary rock composed of silt-sized rock and mineral
material and more or less firmly cemented. Silt particles range from 1/16 to 1/256 mm in size.
sinkhole A roughly circular depression in a karst area measuring meters to tens of meters in
diameter. It is funnel shaped and is formed by collapse of the surface material into an underlying
void created by the dissolution of carbonate rock.
slope An inclined part of the; earth's surface,
solution cavity A hole, channel or cave-like cavity formed by dissolution of rock.
stratigraphy The study of rock strata; also refers to the succession of rocks of a particular area.
surficial materials Unconsolidated glacial, wind-, or waterborne deposits occurring on the
earth's surface.
tablelands General term for a broad, elevated region with a nearly level surface of considerable
extent.
11-25 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
terrace gravel Gravel-sized material that caps ridges and terraces, left behind by a stream as it
cuts down to a lower level.
terrain A tract or region of the Earth's surface considered as a physical feature or an ecological
environment.
till Unsorted, generally unconsolidated and unbedded rock and mineral material deposited directly
adjacent to and underneath a glacier, without reworking by meltwater. Size of grains varies greatly
from clay to boulders.
uraniferous Containing uranium, usually more than 2 ppm.
vendor data Used in this report to refer to indoor radon data collected and measured by
commercial vendors of radon measurement devices and/or services.
volcanic Pertaining to the activities, structures, and extrusive rock types of a volcano.
water table The surface forming the boundary between the zone of saturation and the zone of
aeration; the top surface of a body of unconfined groundwater in rock or soil.
weathering The destructive process by which earth and rock materials, on exposure to
atmospheric elements, are changed in color, texture, composition, firmness, or form with little or
no transport of the material.
n-26 Reprinted from USGS Open-FUe Report 93-292
-------
APPENDIX C
EPA REGIONAL OFFICES
EPA Regional Offices
State
EPA Region
EPA Region 1
JFK Federal Building
Boston, MA 02203
(617) 565-4502
EPA Region 2
(2AIR:RAD)
26 Federal Plaza
New York, NY 10278
(212) 264-4110
Region 3 (3AH14)
•841 Chestnut Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107
(215) 597-8326
EPA Region 4
345 Court|and Street, N.E.
Atlanta, GA 30365
(404) 347-3907
EPA Region 5 (5AR26)
77 West Jackson Blvd.
Chicago, IL 60604-3507
(312) 886-6175
EPA Region 6 (6T-AS)
1445 Ross Avenue,
Dallas, TX 75202-2733
(214) 655-7224
EPA Region 7
726 Minnesota Avenue
Kansas City, KS 66101
(913) 551-7604
EPA Region 8
(8HWM-RP)
999 18th Street
One Denver Place, Suite 1300
Denver, CO 80202-2413
<303) 293-1713
EPA Region 9 (A-3)
75 Hawthorne Street
San Francisco, CA 94105
1 (415) 744-1048
EPA Region 10
1200 Sixth Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101
(202) 442-7660
Alabama ......4
Alaska ., ....10
Arizona ...9
Arkansas .-. 6
California >.'. .....9
Colorado..... 8
Connecticut 1
Delaware i 3
District of Colombia 3
Florida ...4
Georgia ,,.... 4
Hawaii ". 9
Idaho 10
Illinois.... '. ."...5
Indiana 5
Iowa 7
Kansas i « : 7
Kentucky 4
Louisiana 6
Maine ; 1
Maryland.. ..'....3
Massachusetts. 1
Michigan..... ..5
Minnesota -. 5
Mississippi 4
Missouri 7
Montana,... '. ..8
Nebraska „„.-.,„ 7
Nevada,.,..., 9
New Hampshire ...1
New Jersey 2
New Mexico 6
New York.. ....2
North Carolina .....4
North Dakota 8
Ohio...,..,.,... 5
Oklahoma 6
Oregon , 10
Pennsylvania 3
Rhode Island „!"
South Carolina ...........4
South Dakota '. 8
Tennessee... ,.4
Texas 6
Utah , 8
Vermont , 1
Virginia 3
Washington 10
West Virginia 3
Wisconsin 5
Wyoming .' 8
Et-27 Reprinted ftom USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
STATE RADON CONTACTS
May, 1993
Alabama Janes McNees
Division of Radiation Control
Alabama Department of Public health
State Office Building
Montgomery, AL 36130
(2)5)242-5315
1-800-582-1866 in state
diaries Tedford
Department of Health and Social
Services
P.O. Box 110613
Juneau,AK 99811-0613
(907)465-3019
1-800-478-4845 in state
John Stewart
Arizona Radiation Regulatory Agency
4814 South 40th St
Phoenix, AZ 85040
(602) 25S4845
Arkansas Lee Gershner
Division of Radiation Control
Department of Health
4815 Markham Street, Slot 30
Little Rock, AR 72205-3867
(501) 661-2301
California J. David Quinton
Department of Health Services
714 P Street, Room 600
Sacramento, CA 94234-7320
(916) 324-2208
1-800-745-7236 in state
Colorado Linda Martin
Department of Health
4210 East 11th Avenue
Denver, CO 80220
(303)692-3057
1-800-846-3986 in state
Connecticut Alan J, Staiscalchi
Radon Pt>gram
Connecticut Department of Health
Services
150 Washington Street
Hartford, CT 061064474
(203)566-3122
Delaware Marai G. ,R0jai
Office of Radiation Control
Division of Public Health
P.O. Box 637
Dover, DE 19903
(302)736-3028
1-800-554-4636 In State
District Robert Davis
of Columbia DC Department of Consumer and
Regulatory Affairs
614 H Street NW
Room 1014
Washington, DC 20001
(202) 727-71068
glorida N. Michael Gilley
Office of Radiation Control
Department of Health and
Rehabilitative Services
1317 Winewood Boulevard
Tallahassee, FL 32399-0700
(904)488-1525
1-800-543-8279 in state
Richard Schreiber
Georgia Department of Human
Resources
878 Peachtree St., Room 100
Atlanta, GA 30309
(404) 894-6644
1-800-745-0037 in state
Hawaii Russell Takata
Environmental Health Services
Division
591 Ala Moana Boulevard
Honolulu, ffl 96813-2498
(808)5864700
11-28 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
PatMcGavarn
Office of Environmental Health
450 West State Street
Boise, ED 83720
(208) 334-6584
1-800-445-8647 in state
Richard Allen
Illinois Department of Nuclear Safety
1301 Outer Park Drive
Springfield, IL 62704
(217)524-5614
1-800-325-1245 in state
Lorand Magyar.
Radiological Health Section
Indiana State Department of Health
1330 West Michigan Street
P.O. Box 1964
Indianapolis, IN 46206
(317)633-8563
1-800-272-9723 In State
Donald A. Hater
Bureau of Radiological Health
Iowa Department of Public Health
Lucas State Office Building
Des Moines, IA 50319-0075
(515)281-3478
1-800-383-5992 In State
Harold Spiker
Radiation Control Program
Kansas Department of Health and
Environment
109 SW 9th Street
6th Floor Mills Building
Topeka,KS 66612 ,'
(913)296-1561
JeanaPhelps '
Radiation Control Branch
Department of Health Services
Cabinet for Human Resources
275 East Main Street
Frankfort, KY 40601 -
(502) 564-3700
Louisiana Matt Schlenker
Louisiana Department of
Environmental Quality
; P.O. Box 82135
Baton Rouge, LA 70&84-2135
(504)925-7042
1-800-256-2494 in state
Maine BobStilwell
Division of Health Engineering
Department of Human Services
State House, Station 10
Augusta, ME 04333
(207)289-5676
1-800-232-0842 in state
Maryland Leon J. Rachuba
Radiological Health Program
Maryland Department of the
Environment
2500 Broening Highway
Baltimore, MD 21224
(410)631-3301
1-800-872-3666 In State
Massachusetts William J. Bell
' Radiation Control Program
Department of Public Health
23 Service Center
Northampton, MA 01060
(413)586-7525
1-800-445-1255 in state
Michigan SueHendeishott
Division of Radiological Health
Bureau of Environmental and
Occupational Health
3423 North Logan Street
P.O. Box 30195
Lansing, MI 48909
(517) 335-8194
Minnesota Laura Oatmahn
Indoor Air Quality Unit
925 Delaware Street, SE
, P.O. Box 59040
Minneapolis, MN 55459-0040
(612)627-5480
1-800-798-9050 in state
H-29
Reprinted from USGS Open-Fife Report 93-292
-------
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Silas Anderson
Division of Radiological Health
Department of Health
3 150 Lawson Street
P.O. Box 1700
Jackson, MS 39215-1700
(601) 354-6657
1-800-626-7739 in state
Kenneth V. Miller
Bureau of Radiological Health
Missouri Department of Health
1730 last Elm
P.O. Box 570
Jefferson City, MO 65102
(314)751-6083
1-800-669-7236 In State
Adrian C. Howe
Occupational Health Bureau
Montana Department of Health and
Environmental Sciences
Cogswell Building A113
Helena, MT 59620
(406)444-3671
Joseph Milone
Division of Radiological Health
Nebraska Department of Health
301 Centennial Mall, South
P.O. Box 95007
Lincoln, NE 68509
(402)471-2168
1-800-334-9491 In State
Stan Marshall
Department of Human Resources
505 East King Sireet
Room 203
Carson City, NV 89710
(702) 687-5394
New Hampshire David Chase
Bureau of Radiological Health
Division of Public Health Services
Health and Welfare Building
Six Hazen Drive
Concord, NH 03301
(603)271-4674
1-800-852-3345 x4674
Nebraska
New Jersey Tonalee Carlson Key
Division of Environmental Quality
Department of Environmental
Protection
,CN415
Trenton, NJ 08625-0145
(609)987-6369
1-800-648-0394 in state
New Mexico William M. Floyd
Radiation Licensing and Registration
Section
New Mexico Environmental
Improvement Division
1190 St. Francis Drive
Santa Fe,NM 87503
(505)827-4300
New York William J. Condon
Bureau of Environmental Radiation
Protection
New York State Health Department
Two University Place
Albany, NY 12202
(518)458-6495
1-800-458-1158 in state
North Carolina Dr. Felix Fong
Radiation Protection Division
Department of Environmental Health
and Natural Resources
701 Barbour Drive
RaMgh, NC 27603-2008
(919) 571-4141
1-800-662-7301 (recorded info x4196)
North Dakota Arlen Jacobson
North Dakota Department of Health
1200 Missouri Avenue, Room 304
P.O. Box 5520
Bismarck, ND 58502-5520
(701)221-5188
Marcie Matthews
Radiological Health Program
Department of Health
1224 Kinnear Road - Suite 120
Columbus, OH 43212
(614) 644-2727
1-800-523-4439 in state
H-30
Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
Oklahoma
Oregon.
Pennsylvania
Puerto Rico
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Gene Smith
Radiation Protection Division
Oklahoma State Department of
Health
P.O. Box 53551
Oklahoma City, OK 73152
(405) 271-5221
George Toombs
Department of Human Resources
Health Division
1400 SW 5th Avenue •
Portland, OR 97201
(503)7314014
Michael Pyles
Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Resources
Bureau of Radiation Protection
P.O. Box 2063
Harrisburg, PA 17120
(717) 783-3594
1-800-23-RADON In State
David Saldana
Radiological Health Division
G.P.O. Call Box 70184
Rio Kedras, Puerto Rico 00936
(809) 767-3563
Edmund Arcand ,
Division of Occupational Health and
Radiation
Department of Health
205 Cannon Building
Davis Street
Providence, RI02908
(401)277-2438
Bureau of Radiological Health
Department of Health and
Environmental Control
2600 Bull Street
Columbia, SC 29201
(803)734-4631
1-800-768-0362
Sputh Dakota MkePochop
Division of Environment Regulation
Department of Water and Natural
.Resources
Joe Foss Building, Room 217
523 E. Capitol
-' Pierre, SD 57501-3181
(605)773-3351
Tennessee Susie Shimek
Division of Air Pollution Control
Bureau of the Environment
Department of Environment and
Conservation
Customs House, 701 Broadway
Nashville, TN 37219-5403 .
.(615)532-0733
1-800-232-1139 in state
Gary Smith
Bureau of Radiation Control
.Texas Department of Health
1100 West 49th Street
Austin, TX 78756-3189
(512) 834-6688
Ulah John Hultquist
Bureau of Radiation Control
, Utah State Department of Health
288 North, 1460 West
P.O. Box 16690
Salt Lake City, UT 84116-0690
(801) 536-4250
Vermont Paul demons
Occupational and Radiological Health
Division .
Vermont Department of Health
10 Baldwin Street
Montpelier, VT 05602
(902) 828-2886
1-800-640-0601 in state
Virgin Islands Contact the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Region n
: in New York
(212)2644110
n-3i
Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
Virginia Shelly Ottenbrite
Bureau of Radiological Health
Department of Health
109 Governor Street
Richmond, VA 23219
(804) 786-5932
1-800-468-0138 to state
Washington KateColeman
Department of Health
Office of Radiation Protection
Airdustrial Building 5, LE-13
Olympia,WA 98504
(206)753-4518
1-800-323-9727 In State
West Virginia Beanie L.DeBord
Industrial Hygiene Division
West Virginia Department of Health
151 llth Avenue
South Charleston, WV 25303
(304) 558-3526
1-800-922-1255 In State
Wisconsin Conrad Weifferibach
Radiation Protection Section
Division of Health
Department of Health and Social
Services
P.O. Box 309
Madison, WI53701-0309
(608)267-4796
1-800-798-9050 in state
WyQjnmg Janet Hough
Wyoming Department of Health and
Social Services
Hathway Building, 4th Floor
Cheyenne, WY 82002-0710
(307) 777-6015
1-800-458-5847 in state
11-32 Reprinted ftom USGS Open-File Report 93-292
-------
STATE GEOLOGICAL SURVEYS
May, 1993
Alabama . Ernest A. Mancini
Geological Survey of Alabama
P.O. Box 0
420 Haekberry Lane
Tuscaloosa, AL 35486-9780
(205)349-2852
Alaska Thomas E. Smith
Alaska Division of Geological &/
Geophysical Surveys
794 University Ave., Suite 200
Fairbanks, AK 99709-3645
(907)479-7147
Arizona Larry D. Fellows
Arizona Geological Survey
845 North Park Ave., Suite 100
Tucson, AZ 85719
(602) 882-4795
Arkansas Norman F. Williams
Arkansas Geological Commission
VardeUeParham Geology Center
3815 West Roosevelt Rd.
Little Rock, AR 72204
(501) 324-9165
California James F. Davis
California Division of Mines &
Geology
801 K Street, MS 12-30
: Sacramento, CA 95814-3531
(916)445-1923
Colorado Pat Rogers (Acting)
Colorado Geological Survey
1313 Sherman St., Rm 715
Denver, CO 80203
(303)866-2611
Connecticut Richard C. Hyde
Connecticut Geological & Natural
History Survey
165 Capitol Ave., Rm. 553
Hartford, CT 06106
(203) 566-3540
Delaware Robert R. Jordan
Delaware Geological Survey
University of Delaware
101 Penny Hall
Newark, DE 19716-7501
(302)831-2833
Florida Walter Schmidt
Florida Geological Survey
903 W. Tennessee St
Tallahassee, FL 32304-7700
(904)4884191
William H. MeLemore
Georgia Geologic Survey
Rm. 400
19 Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. SW
Atlanta, GA 30334
(404) 656-3214 :
Manabu Tagomori
Dep t. of Land and Natural Resources
Division of Water & Land Mgt
P.O. Box 373
Honolulu, HI 96809
(808) 548-7539'
Earl H. Bennett
Idaho Geological Survey
University of Idaho
Morrill Hall, Rm. 332
Moscow, ID 83843
(208) 885-7991
Illinois Morris W. Leighton
Illinois State Geological Survey
Natural Resources Building
615 East Peabody Dr.
Champaign, IL 61820
(217)333-4747
Indiana Norman C. Hester
Indiana Geological Survey
611 North Walnut Grove
Bloomington, IN 47405
(812)855-9350
Idaho
Iowa
Donald L.Koch
Iowa Department of. Natural Resources
Geological Survey Bureau
109 Trowbridge Hall
Iowa City, IA 52242-1319
(319)335-1575
LeeC. Gerhard
Kansas Geological Survey
1930 Constant Ave., West Campus
University of Kansas
Lawrence, KS 66047
(913) 864-3965
n-33
Reprinted ftom USGS Open-File Report 93-292
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Kentucky Donald C. Haney
Kentucky Geological Survey
University of Kentucky
228 Mining & Mineral Resources
Building
Lexington, KY 40506-0107
(606) 257-5500
Louisiana William E. Marsalis
Louisiana Geological Survey
P.O. Box 2827
University Station
Baton Rouge, LA 70821-2827
(504) 388-5320
Maine Walter A. Anderson
Maine Geological Survey
Department of Conservation
State House, Station 22
Augusta, ME 04333
(207)289-2801
Maryland Emery T. Cleaves
Maryland Geological Survey
2300 St. Paul Street
Baltimore, MD 21218-5210
(410) 554-5500
Massachusetts Joseph A. Sinnott
Massachusetts Office of
Environmental Affairs
100 Cambridge St. Room 2000
Boston. MA 02202
(617)727-9800
Michigan R. Thomas Segall
Michigan Geological Survey Division
Box 30256
Lansing, MI 48909
(517)334-6923
Minnesota Priscilla C. Grew
Minnesota Geological Survey
2642 University Ave.
St Paul, MN 55114-1057
(612)627^780
Mississippi S. Cragin Knox
Mississippi Office of Geology
P.O. Box 20307
Jackson, MS 39289-1307
.(601)961-5500
Missouri James H. Williams
Missouri Division of Geology &.
Land Survey
111 Fairgrounds Road
P.O. Box 250
Rolla, MO 65401
(314)368-2100
Montana Edward T.Ruppel
Montana Bureau of Mines & Geology
Montana College of Mineral Science
and Technology, Main Hall
Butte,MT 59701
(406)496-4180
Nebraska Perry B.Wigley
Nebraska Conservation & Survey
Division
113 Nebraska Hall
University of Nebraska
Lincoln, NE 68588-0517
(402)472-2410
Nevada Jonathan G. Price
Nevada Bureau of Mines & Geology
Stop 178
University of Nevada-Reno
Reno, NV 89557-0088
-(702)784-6691
New Hampshire Eugene L. Boudette
Dept. of Environmental Services
117 James Hall
University of New Hampshire
Durham, NH 03824-3589
(603) 862-3160
New Jersey Haig F. Kasabach
New Jersey Geological Survey
P.O. Box 427
Trenton, NJ 08625
(609)292-1185
New Mexico Charles E. Chapin
New Mexico Bureau of Mines &
Mineral Resources
Campus Station
Socorro.NM 87801
(505) 835-5420
Newjyprk Robert H. Fakundiny
New York State Geological Survey
3136 Cultural Education Center
Empire State Plaza
Albany, NY 12230
(518)474-5816
IE-34 Reprinted from USGS Open-Ffle Report 93-292
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North Carolina Charles H. Gardner
North Carolina Geological Survey
P.O. Box 27687
Raleigh, NC 27611-7687
• . . . (919)733-3833
North Dakota John P, Bluemle
North Dakota Geological Survey
,600 East Blvd.
Bismarck, ND 58505-0840
(701)2244109
Ohio Thomas M. Berg
\ ' Ohio Dept of Natural Resources
Division of Geological Survey
4383 Fountain Square Drive
Columbus, OH 43224-1362
(614) 265-6576
Oklahoma Charles J. Mankin
Oklahoma Geological Survey
Room N-131, Energy Center
100E.Boyd
, Norman, OK 73019-0628
(405)325-3031
Oregon Donald A. Hull
' Dept. of Geology & Mineral Indust.
: Suite 965
800 NE Oregon St. #28
Portland, OR 97232-2162
(503)731-4600
Pennsylvania Donald M. Hoskins
^ Dept. of Environmental Resources
Bureau of Topographic & Geologic
Survey
P.O. Box 2357
: Harrisburg, PA 17105-2357
; (717)787-2169
Puerto Rico _ Ramdn M. Alonso,,
Puerto Rico Geological Survey
Division
Box 5887
. Puerta de Tierra Station
San Juan, PJL 00906
(809)722-2526
RhodgJsland J. Allan Cain
Department of Geology
University of Rhode Island
315 Green Hall
Kingston, RI02881
(401)792-2265
South Carolina Alan-Jon W.Zupan (Acting)
South Carolina Geological Survey
S Geology Road
Columbia, SC 29210-9998
(803)737-9440
South Dakpta CM. Christensen (Acting)
South Dakota Geological Survey
Science Center
University of South Dakota
Vermillion, SD 57069-2390
(605)677-5227
Tennessee Edward T.Luther
Tennessee Division of Geology
13th Hoor, L & C Tower
401 Church Street
Nashville, TN 37243-0445
(615)532-1500
Texas William L, Fisher
Texas Bureau of Economic Geology
University of Texas
University Station, Box X
Austin, TX 78713-7508
(512)471-7721
Utah M. Lee Allison
Utah Geological & Mineral Survey
2363 S. Foothill Dr.
Salt Lake City, UT 84109-1491
(801)467-7970
Vermont Diane L. Conrad -
Vermont Division of Geology and
Mineral Resources
103 South Main St.
Waterbury.VT 05671
(802)244-5164
Virginia Stanley S, Johnson
Virginia Division of Mineral
Resources
P.O. Box 3667
Charlottesville, VA 22903
(804) 293-5121
Washington Raymond Lasmanis
Washington Division of Geology &
Earth Resources
Department of Natural Resources
P.O. Box 47007
Olympia, Washington 98504-7007
(206)902-1450
11-35 Reprinted ftomUSGS Open-File Report 93-292
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West Virginia Larry D. Woodfoik
West Virginia Geological and
Economic Survey
Mont Chateau Research Center
P.O. Box 879
Morgantown.WV 26507-0879
(304)594-2331
Wisconsin James Robertson
Wisconsin Geological & Natural
History Survey
3817 Mineral Point Road
Madison, WI 53705-5100
(608)263-7384
Wyoming Gary B. Glass
Geological Survey of Wyoming
University of Wyoming
Box 3008, University Station
Laramie, WY 82071-3008
(307) 766-2286
n-36
Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292
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EPA REGION 6 GEOLOGIC RADON POTENTIAL SUMMARY
by
Linda C.S. Gundersen, James K. Otton, Russell F, Dubiel, and Sandra L. Szarzi
US. Geological, Survey
EPA Region 6 includes the states Arkansas,. Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and
Texas. For each state, geologic radon potential areas were delineated and ranked on the basis of
geology, soils, housing construction, indoor radon, and other factors. Areas in which the.average
screening indoor radon level of all homes within the area is estimated to be greater than 4 pQ/L
were ranked high. Areas in which the average screening indoor radon level of all homes within the
area is estimated to be between 2 and 4 pCi/L were ranked moderate/variable, and areas in which
the average screening indoor radon level of all homes within the area is estimated to be less than
2 pCi/L were ranked low. Information on the data used and on the radon potential ranking scheme
is given in the introduction to this volume. More detailed information on the geology and radon
potential of each state in Region 6 is given in the individual state chapters. The individual chapters
describing the geology and radon potential of the states in Region 6, though much more detailed
than this summary, still are generalized assessments and there is no substitute for having a home
tested. Within any radon potential area homes with indoor radon levels both above and below the
predicted average likely will be found.
Figure 1 shows a generalized map of the physiographic/geologic provinces in Region 6.
The following summary of radon potential in Region 6 is based on these provinces. Figure 2
shows average screening indoor radon levels by county calculated from the State/EPA Residential
Radon Survey. Figure 3 shows the geologic radon potential areas in Region 6, combined and
summarized from the individual state chapters. , .
ARKANSAS . , '
The geologic radon potential of Arkansas is generally low to moderate. Paleozoic marine
limestones, dolomites, and uraniferous black shales appear to be associated with most of the
indoor radon levels greater than 4 pCi/L in the "State.
Ordovician through Mississippian-age sedimentary rocks, including limestone, dolomite,
shale, and sandstone, underlie most of the Springfield and Salem Plateaus. Black shales and
residual soils developed from carbonate rocks in the Springfield and Salem Plateaus are moderate
to locally high in geologic radon potential. The Ordovician limestones, dolomites,, black shales,
and sandstones have moderate (1.5-2.5 ppm) to high (>2.5 ppm) equivalent uranium (eU, from
aeroradioaetivity surveys) and some of the highest indoor radon in the State is associated with
them. The Mississippian limestones and shales, however, have low (
-------
30
Figure 1. Geologic radon potential areas of EPA Region 6. 1,4,7-Cretaceous marine rocks; 2-Jemez Mountains; 3,11-Southern Rocky Mountains; 5,15- s
Tertiary Ogallala Formation (High Plains); 6-Orants uranium belt; 8,9-Plains and Plateaus (Triassic, Cretaceous and Quaternary deposits; 10-Datil-Mogollon
volcanic field; 12-Tertiary volcanic and Cretaceous sedimentary rocks; 13-Late Paleozoic marine limestones; 14-Eastward extension of the Basin and Range
Province; 16-Central Oklahoma and Texas (Paleozoic marine sediments); 17-Wiehita Mountains; 18,19-Cretaceous Central Texas and Llano Uplift; 20-
Northern Coastal Plains (Old Uplands (LA)); 21-Southern Texas Plain; 22~Coastal Plain (TX)/Old Uplands (LA); 23-Ozark Plateau: 24-Lower Arkansas River
Valley; 25-Ouachita Mountains; 26,29-Salem Plateau; 27-Spnngfield Plateau; 28-Boston Mountains; 30-Crowley's Ridge; 31-Fourche Mountains; 32-Athens
Plateau; 33-Central Ouchita Mountains; 34-Mississippi Alluvial Plain; 35,37-Terraces; 36-Prairies,
-------
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'
P JOI
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-------
GEOLOGIC RADON POTENTIAL
LOW{<2pCi/L)
3 MODERATE/VARIABLE (2-4 pCI/L)
I HIGH (>4 pCi/L)
Figure 3. Geologic radon potential areas of EPA Region 6. For more detail, refer to individual state radon potential chapters.
-------
moderate radon potential. Although the indoor radon average for these provinces is low, there are
a number of counties in these provinces with screening indoor radon averages slightly higher than
1 pCi/L and maximum readings greater than 4 pCi/L. The marine black shales are probably
uranium-bearing. Further, carbonaceous sandstones of the Upper Atoka Formation and Savanna
Formation have high (>2.5 ppm) eU associated with them. Uranium also occurs in the Jackfork
Sandstone in Montgomery County and in the Atoka Formation in Crawford County: These rocks
are the most likely sources for the indoor radon levels. Radon from a hydrocarbon source in these
rocks should not be ruled out. The presence of radon and uranium in some natural gas, petroleum,
and asphaitite is well known and could contribute radon to indoor air in some locations.
The Central Ouachita Mountains are underlain by intensely-deformed Qrdovician and
Silurian shales and sandstones with minor chert and limestone. These rocks generally have low to
moderate radon potential. Aeroradiometric signatures of 2.5 ppm eU or more are associated with
the Qrdovician black shales and possibly with some syenite intrusions. Indoor radon in the Central
Ouachita Mountains is low to moderate and permeability of the soils is low to moderate.
The West Gulf Coastal Plain is generally low in radon potential. Some of the Cretaceous
and Tertiary sediments have moderate eU (1.5-2.5 ppm). Recent studies in the Coastal Plain of
Texas, Alabama, and New Jersey show that glauconite and phosphate in sandstones, chalks,
marls, and limestones, as well as black organic clays, shales, and muds, are often associated with
high concentrations of uranium and radon in the sediments, and could be sources for elevated
indoor radon levels. Several formations within the Gulf Coastal Plain of Arkansas contain these
types of sediments, especially parts of the upper Cretaceous and lower Tertiary section, but
average indoor radon levels in this area are not elevated. The Quaternary sediments of the Coastal
Plain have low eU and the indoor radon average is low for the Gulf Coastal Plain overall.
The Mississippi Alluvial Plain and Crowley's Ridge have low to locally moderate radon
potential. The southern half of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain is made up predominantly of
quartzose sediments, has generally low eU, and has low indoor radon. The northern half of the
alluvial plain, however, includes the loess of Crowley's Ridge, which appears to have high
equivalent uranium associated with it, and possibly a high loess content in the surrounding
sediments in general. The northeastern comer of Arkansas appears -to be crossed by the large belt
of loess that continues into Kentucky and Tennessee and shows as a distinct area of high eU on the
aeroradiometric map of the United States. Some areas of high eU may also be due to uranium in
phosphate-rich fertilizers used in agricultural areas. Several of the counties in the northern part of
the alluvial plain have maximum indoor radon values greater than 4 pCi/L and indoor radon
averages between 1 and 2 pCi/L, which are generally higher than those in surrounding counties.
LOUISIANA .
The geology of Louisiana is dominated by ancient marine sediments of the Gulf Coastal
Plain and modem river deposits from the Mississippi River and its tributaries. Louisiana is
generally an area of low geologic radon potential. The climate, soil, and lifestyle of the inhabitants
of Louisiana have influenced building construction styles and building ventilation which, in
general, do not allow high concentrations of radon to accumulate. Many homes in Louisiana are
built on piers or are slab-on-grade. Overall indoor radon is low; however, several parishes had
individual homes with radon levels greater than 4 pCi/L, Parishes with indoor radon levels greater
than 4 pCi/L are found in different parts of the State, in parishes underlain by coastal plain
sediments, terrace deposits, and loess.
m-5 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
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In the Coastal Plain of Louisiana the glauconitic, carbonaceous, and phosphatic sediments
have some geologic potential to produce radon, particularly the Cretaceous and lower Tertiary-age
geologic units located in the northern portion (Old Uplands) of the State. Soils from clays, shales,
and marls in the Coastal Plain commonly have low permeability, so even though these sediments
may be a possible source of radon, lo'w permeability probably inhibits radon availability. Some of
the glauconitic sands and silts with moderate permeability may be the source of locally high indoor
radon. Moderate levels of radioactivity (1.5-2.5 ppm eU) are associated with areas underlain by
the Eocene through lower Oligocene-age Coastal Plain sediments, but do not follow formation
boundaries or strike belts in a systematic manner. The pattern of moderate radioactivity in this area
does appear to follow river drainages and the aeroradioactivity pattern may be associated with
northwest- and northeast-trending joints and or faults which, in turn, may control drainage
patterns. Part of the pattern of low aeroradioactivity in the Coastal Plain may be influenced by
ground saturation with water. This area receives high precipitation and contains an extensive
system of bayous and rivers. Besides damping gamma radioactivity, ground saturation can also
inhibit radon movement.
The youngest Coastal Plain sediments, particularly Oligocene and younger, have
decreasing amounts of glauconite and phosphate and become increasingly siliceous (silica-rich),
and thus, are less likely to be significant sources of radon. However, the possibility of roll-front
uranium deposits in sedimentary rocks and sediments of Oligocene-Miocene age, analogous to the
roll-front uranium deposits in Texas, has been proposed. Anomalous gamma-ray activity has been
measured in the lower Catahoula sandstone, but no uranium deposits have yet been identified.
The fluvial and deltaic sediments in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain are low in geologic radon
potential. They are not likely to have elevated amounts of uranium and the saturated to seasonally
wet conditions of the soils, as well as the high water tables, do not facilitate radon availability.
Coarse gravels in the terraces of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain have locally very high permeability
and may be a source of radon.
Loess unite in the northern portion of the Mississippi floodplain can easily be identified by
their radiometrie signature on the aeroradioactivity map of Louisiana. Loess is associated with
high radiometric anomalies throughout the United States. Radiometrie anomalies also seem to be
associated with exposures of loess in Iberia, Lafayette, eastern Acadia, and northern Vermilion
Parishes, in the southeastern part of the Prairies. Loess tends to have low permeability, so even
though these sediments may be a possible source of high radon, the lack of permeability,
particularly in wet soils, may inhibit radon availability.
NEW MEXICO , '
An overriding factor in the geologic evaluation of New Mexico is the abundance and
widespread outcrops in local areas of known uranium-producing and uranium-bearing rocks in the
State. Rocks known to contain significant uranium deposits, occurrences, or reserves, and rocks
such as marine shales or phosphatic limestones that are known to contain low but uniform
concentrations of uranium, all have the potential to contribute to elevated levels of indoor radon. In
New Mexico, these rocks include Precambrian granites, pegmatites, and small hydrothermal veins;,
the Pennsylvanian and Permian Cutler Formation, Sangre de Cristo Formation, and San Andres
Limestone; the Triassic Chinle Formation; the Jurassic Morrison Formation and Todilto Limestone
Member (Wanakah Formation); the Cretaceous Dajkota Sandstone, Kirttand Shale, Fraitland
Formation, and Crevasse Canyon Formation; the Cretaceous and Tertiary Ojo Alamo Sandstone;
Jtt-6 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
Tertiary Ogallala Formation and Popotosa Formation (Santa Fe Group); Tertiary alkalic intrusive
rocks and rhyolitic and andesitic volcanic rocks such as the Alum Mountain andesite; and the
Quaternary Bandelier Tuff and Valles Rhyolite,
Several areas in New Mexico contain outcrops of one or more of these.rock units that may
contribute to elevated radon levels. The southern and western, rims of the San Juan Basin expose a
Paleozoic to Tertiary sedimentary section that contains the Jurassic, Cretaceous, and Tertiary,
sedimentary rocks having,a high radiometric signature and that are known to host uranium deposits
in the Grants uranium district, as well as in the Chuska and Carrizo Mountains. In north-central
New Mexico, the Jemez^Mouhtains are formed in part by volcanic rocks that include the Bandelier
Tuff and the Valles Rhyolite; this area also has an associated high radiometric signature. In
northeastern New Mexico, Precarnbrian crystalline rocks and Paleozoic sedimentary rocks of the
southern Rocky Mountains and Tertiary volcanic rocks and Cretaceous sedimentary rocks are
associated with radiometric highs. In southwestern New Mexico, middle Tertiary volcanic rocks
of the Datil-Mogollon region are also associated with high radiometric signatures. Remaining areas
of the Colorado Plateau, the Basin and Range, and the Great Plains are associated with only
moderate to low radiometric signatures on the aeroradiometric map; these areas generally contain
Paleozoic to Mesozoie sedimentary rocks, scattered Tertiary and Quaternary volcanic rocks, and
locally, Tertiary sedimentary rocks. , • ,
The southern extension of the Rocky Mountains and uplifted Paleozoic sedimentary rocks in
central New Mexico; Upper Cretaceous marine shales, and uranium-bearing Jurassic fluvial
sandstones of the Grants uranium belt in.the northeastern part of the State; and Tertiary volcanic
rocks in the Jemez Mountains, just west of the southern Rocky Mountains, have high radon
potential. Average screening indoor radon levels are greater than 4 pCi/L and aeroradioactivity
signatures are generally greater than 2.5 ppm e0. Rocks such as Precarnbrian granites and uplifted
Paleozoic strata, Jurassic sandstones and limestones, or Cretaceous to Tertiary shales and volcanic
rocks that are known to contain or produce uranium are the most likely sources of elevated indoor
radon levels in these areas. The remainder of the State has generally moderate radioactivity,
average screening indoor radon levels less than 4 pCi/L, and overall moderate geologic radon
potential. ...
OKLAHOMA
The geology of Oklahoma is dominated by sedimentary rocks and unconsolidated
sediments that vary in age from Cambrian to Holocene., Precarnbrian and Cambrian-igneous rocks
are exposed in the core of the Arbuckle and Wichita Mountains and crop out in about 1 percent of
the State. The western, northern, and central part of the State is underlain by very gently west-
dipping sedimentary rocks of the northern shelf areas. A series of uplifts and basins flank the
central shelf area. The Gulf Coastal Plain forms the southeastern edge of the State.
Most of the rocks that crop out in the central and eastern part of the State are marine in
origin; they include limestone, dolomite, shale, sandstone, chert, and coal of Cambrian through
Permian age. Nonmarine rocks of Permian and Tertiary age, including shale, sandstone, and
conglomerate, are present in the western part of the central Oklahoma Hills and Plains area; sand,
clay, gravel, and caliche dominate in the High Plains in the western part of the State. The Gulf
Coastal Plain is underlain by Cretaceous nonmarine sand and clay and marine limestone and clay.
Some of these units locally are moderately uranium-bearing.
ffi-7 Reprinted from TJSGS Open-Hie Report 93-292-F
-------
Surface radioactivity across the State varies from less than 0.5 ppm to 5.0 ppm eU. Higher
levels of equivalent uranium (>2.5 ppm) are consistently associated with black shales in the
southeastern and westernmost Ouachita Mountains, the Arbuckle Mountains, and the Ozark
Plateau; with Permian shale in Roger Mills, Custer, Washita, and Beckham Counties; with granites
and related rocks in the Wichita Mountains; and with Cretaceous shale and associated limestone in
the Coastal Plain, Low eU values (<1.5 ppm) are associated with large areas of dune sand
adjacent to rivers in western Oklahoma; with eolian sands in the High Plains in Cimarron and Ellis
Counties; and with Mississippian and Pennsylvanian rocks in the Ouachita Mountains, the Ozark
Plateau, and the eastern part of the central Oklahoma plains and hills.
Areas of Oklahoma ranked as locally moderate to high are underlain by black, phosphatic
shales and associated limestones in the northeastern part of the State and near the Arbuckle
Mountains; the Upper Permian Rush Springs Formation in Caddo County; and granites, rhyolites,
and related dikes in the Wichita Mountains in the southwestern part of the State. Areas ranked as
generally low are underlain by Paleozoic marine sedimentary rocks in central and northwestern
Oklahoma and by Tertiary continental sedimentary rocks on the High Plains.
Well-drained alluvial terraces along some rivers (for example, along the Arkansas River
west of Tulsa); steep, thin, sandy to gravelly soils developed on sandstone on river bluffs (for
example, bluffs in the southeastern suburbs of Tulsa); and clayey loams on uraniferous shales (in
the northeastern corner of the State) are responsible for a significant percentage of elevated indoor
radon levels in those areas. Thus, in addition to soils derived from rocks with elevated uranium
content, soils in selected parts of counties where river terraces and sandstone bluffs occur might
also have elevated radon potential.
Soil moisture may have an additional effect on radon potential across the State. Indoor
radon values tend to be higher west of Oklahoma City where rainfall is less than 32 inches per year
and lowest in the southeastern corner of the State, where rainfall ranges from 32 to 64 inches per
year. Indoor radon values in northeastern Oklahoma, where rainfall is also high, include many
readings greater than 4 pCi/L, but the effects of uraniferous black shales and weathered limestone
soils on indoor radon may increase the levels overall and counter the effects of regional variation in
soil moisture. High permeability, dry soils, and moderate uranium content may be responsible for
elevated indoor radon readings in Beaver County,
TEXAS
The geologic radon potential of Texas is relatively low to moderate overall. The relatively
mild climate throughout much of the State, especiaEy in the most populous areas, and the
predominance of slab-on-grade housing seems to have influenced the overall potential. Significant
percentages of houses with radon levels exceeding 4 pCi/L are restricted primarily to the High
Plains and the Western Mountains and Basins provinces. However, no physiographic province in
Texas is completely free from indoor radon levels greater than 4 pCi/L.
Elevated indoor radon can be .expected in several geologic settings in Texas. Granites and
metamorphic rocks in central Texas, Tertiary silicic volcanic and tuffaceous sedimentary rocks in
western Texas, dark marine shales in east-central Texas and the Big Bend area, sand and caliche
associated with the OgaUala Formation and overlying units in the High Plains of Texas, sediments
of Late Cretaceous age along the eastern edge of central Texas, and residual soils and alluvium
derived from these units are likely to have significant percentages of homes over 4 pCi/L. Except
for the High Plains and the Western Mountains and Basins Provinces, these rocks generally make
IH-8 Reprinted from USGS OpenrFile Report 93-292-F
-------
up only a relatively small percentage of the surface area of the various physiographic provinces.
However, the outcrop belt of Upper Cretaceous sedimentary rocks of the East Texas Province
passes near some substantial population centers. Extreme indoor radon levels (greater than 100 ,
pCi/L) may be .expected where structures are inadvertently sited on uranium occurrences. This is
more likely to occur in more populated areas along the uu,jrop belt of the Ogallala Formation at the
edge of the Llano Estacada in the northern and central parts of the High Plains and Plateaus
Province. In this outcrop area, sedimentary rocks with more, than 10 ppm uranium are relatively
common. . ;
The northern part of the High Plains and Plateau Province has moderate radon potential.
Uranium occurrences, uranium-bearing calcrete and sUcrete, and uranium-bearing lacustrine rocks <
along the outcrop belt of the Ogallala Formation and in small upper Tertiary lacustrine basins
within the northern High Plains may locally cause very high indoor radon levels. Indoor radon
data are elevated in many counties in this area, Equivalent uranium values in this area range from
1.0 to 4.0 ppm. An area of elevated eU along the Rio Grande. River is included in this radon
potential province. The southern part of the High Plains and Plateaus Province has low radon
potential overall as suggested by generally low eU values and low indoor radon. This area is
sparsely populated and existing indoor radon measurements may hot adequately reflect the geologic
radon potential. An area of low eU covered by the sandy facies of the Blackwater Draw
Formation in the northeastern corner of the Western Mountains and Basins Province is included in
this radon potential area. Some parts of this province that may have locally elevated indoor radon
levels include areas of thin soils over limestone and dolomite in the Edwards Plateau of the
southern part of this province, and areas of carbonaceous sediments in the southeastern part of this
province. •
The Western Mountains and Basins Province has moderate indoor radon potential overall.
Although average indoor radon levels are mixed (low in El Paso County, but high in three southern
counties), areas of elevated eU are widespread. Uranium-bearing Precambrian rocks, silicic
volcanic rocks, and alluvium derived from them may locally cause average indoor radon levels in
some communities to exceed 4 pCi/L. Some indoor radon levels exceeding 20 pCi/L may also be
expected. Exceptionally dry soils in this province may tend to lower radon potential. In very dry
soils, the emanating fraction of radon from mineral matter is lowered somewhat ,
The Central Texas Province has low radon potential overall; however, areas along the
outcrop belt of the Woodbine and Eagle Ford Formations and the Austin Chalk along the east edge
of this province, and areas of Precambrian metamorphic and undifferentiated igneous rocks in the
Llano Uplift in the southern part of this province have moderate geologic radon potential.
Structures sited on uranium occurrences in the Triassic Dockum Group in the western part of this
province may locally have very high indoor radon levels.
The East Texas Province has low radon potential overall. Soil moisture levels are typically
high; soil permeability is typically low to moderate; and eU levels are low to moderate. A few
areas of well-drained soils and elevated eU may be associated with local areas of moderately
elevated indoor radon levels.
The South Texas Plain has low radon potential due to generally low eU and low to -
moderate soil.permeability; Some structures sited on soils with slightly elevated uranium contents
in this province may locally have elevated indoor radon levels, but such soils are generally also
clay rich and this may mitigate radon movement The Texas Coastal Plain has low radon potential.
Low aeroradioactivity, low to moderate soil permeability, and locally high water tables contribute
to the low radon potential of the region.
m-9 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
Page Intentionally Blank
-------
PRELIMINARY GEOLOGIC RADON POTENTIAL ASSESSMENT OF ARKANSAS
-, by '
Linda C.S. Gundersen
U.S. Geological Survey
INTRODUCnON ..;./'
Indoor radon data from 1535 homes in Arkansas were collected during the winter of
1990-91 as part of the State/EPA Residential Radon Survey. The maximum value recorded in the
survey was 24.2 pCi/L in Benton County. The average indoor radon for the state was 1.2 pCi/L
and 5.3 percent of the homes tested had screening indoor radon levels exceeding 4 pCi/L. The
geologic radon potential of Arkansas is generally low to moderate. Paleozoic marine limestones,
dolomites, and uraniferous black shales appear to be associated with most of the indoor radon
levels greater than 4 pCi/L in the State.
This is a generalized assessment of geologic radon potential of rocks, soils, and surficial
deposits of Arkansas. The scale of this assessment is such that it is inappropriate for use in
identifying the radon potential of small areas such as neighborhoods, individual building sites, or
housing tracts. Any localized assessment of radon potential must be supplemented with additional
data and information from the locality. Within any area of a given radon potential ranking, there
are likely to be areas with higher or lower radon levels than characterized for the area as a whole.
Indoor radon levels, both high and low, can be quite localized, and there is no substitute for testing
individual homes. Elevated levels of indoor radon have been found in every State, and EPA
recommends that all homes be tested. For more information on radon, the reader is urged to
consult the local or State radon program or EPA regional office. More detailed information on state
or local geology may be obtained from the state geological survey. Addresses and phone numbers
f or these agencies are listed in chapter 1 of this booklet , «
PHYSIOGRAPHIC AND GEOGRAPHIC SETTING
, -t
Arkansas has considerable diversity in its three major physiographic regions: the Ozark
Plateaus, the Ouachita Mountains, and the Gulf Coastal Plain. Each of the major provinces is
subdivided into sections (fig. 1). The physiographic provinces of Arkansas are a reflection of the
underlying bedrock geology (fig. 2). The northern part of the State is characterized by the relatively
flat-lying sedimentary rocks of the Salem and Springfield Plateaus and Boston Mountains. The
Salem Plateau is generally 200 to 1,250 feet above sea level and is characterized by undulating to
hilly terrain, with relief seldom exceeding 200 feet The Springfield Plateau ranges from 1000 to
1500 feet above sea level and is characterized by broad to hilly terrain with relief of 200-300 feet
The Boston Mountains are flat-topped ridges representing the original erosion surface of the
plateaus. Extensive stream dissection has created steep-sided mountains and deep, narrow valleys.
Elevations generally range from 1500 to over 2500 feet with 500 to 1300 feet of relief.
The sedimentary rocks of the Ouachita Mountains underwent folding and faulting, creating
parallel ridges and valleys with an east-west orientation. Mountain ridges are narrow and have
steep slopes and broad valleys. Within the Ouachita Mountains, the Arkansas Valley is 30-40
miles wide and it is traversed by the Arkansas River, .which has developed a distinct alluvial plain.
Elevation is generally about 500 feet, but several isolated mountains rise from the valley floor to as
, high as 2753 feet at the top' of Magazine Mountain. The Fourche Mountains contain several major
IV-1 Reprinted from USGS Open-FUe Report 93-292-F
-------
SALEM PLATEAU
SPRlNGFIELb
*t i
BOSTON "MOUNT/UNS
i i
^ i -*^-—— i i .
' _f' ARKANSAS VALLEY f
i. ~ i '
FOURCH^ MOUNTVMNS
CENTRAL
OUACHITA
MOUNTAIN^
^-'%«^.l 1
' ) T"~
i r
i
,' !
1 i ' i
--is ' \-\—
Nj-- /' \
\ ^ 1
\ \ .
i ^
1
Figure 1. Physiographic regions of Arkansas (redrawn from Yates and Cullom, 1973).
-------
Figure 2, Generalized geologic map of Arkansas (after Haley and others, 1976);
-------
Quaternary
EXPLANATION FOR THE GEOLOGIC IMAP OF ARKANSAS
Alluvium
Loess
Terrace deposits
Jackson Group
Claiborne Group
Wilcox Group and Midway Group
Cretaceous
11|II Nacotoch Sand, Arkadelphia Mart, Qzan Formation, Annona Chalk,
"** Marlbrook Marl, and Saratoga Chalk
Tokio Formation and Brownstone Marl
Woodbine Formation
Kiamichi Formation, Goodland Limestone, and Trinity Group
Igneous intrusives, includes undifferentiated rocks of Paleozoic age
Pennsylvanian
Boggy Formation, Savanna Formation, McAlester Formation, and
Hartshorne Sandstone
Atoka Formation
Bloyd Shale, Hale Formation, Johns Valley Shale, and Jackfork Sandstone
Mississippian
Pitkin Limestone, Fayetteville Shale, Batesville Sandstone, Hindsville
Limestone, Ruddell Shale, Moorefield Formation, and Boone Formation
' «a t.
A V...T.
Stanley Shale and Arkansas Novacujite (upper part)
-------
Mississippian - Devonian
Arkansas Novaculite (middle and lower parts), Chattanooga.Shale,
Clifty Limestone, and Penters Chert
Silurian -Ordovician
Lafferty Limestone, St. Clair Limestone, Brassfield Limestone,
Missouri Mountain Slate, Blaylock Sandstone, Polk Creek
Shale, Cason Shale, Fernvale Limestone, Kimmswick
Limestone, Plattin Limestone, Joachim Dolomite, St. Peter
Sandstone, and Everton Formation
Ordovician
Big Fork Chert and Womble Shale
Powell Dolomite, Cotter Dolomite, and Jefferson City Dolomite
Blakely Sandstone, Mazarn Shale, Crystal Mountain Sandstone,
and Collier Shale
-------
ridges with broad valleys. Elevation varies from 1000 to 2500 feet The Central Ouachita
Mountains are closely folded sedimentary rocks with elevations of over 2000 feet; local relief is
300-900 feet The Athens Plateau is a narrow belt in the southern part of the Ouachita Province
underlain by sedimentary rocks. The terrain is undulating with elevation around 500 feet
The southern and eastern parts of the State are low plains and gently rolling hills, with the
exception of Crowley's Ridge, which rises as high as 200 feet above the surrounding plain and is
3-12 miles wide. The West Gulf Coastal Plain stands between 100 and 500 feet above sea level
and consists of gently rolling hills covered by unconsoMdated sediments, mostly sands. The
Mississippi Alluvial Plain is flat with local relef of less than 100 feet and elevations between 100
and 500 feet above sea level.
The highlands are covered mainly by pine, hardwood forests, and pasture while the
lowlands are mainly pasture, cropland, and prairie with pine forest in part of the Coastal Plain arid
hardwood forest in some of the bottomlands.
In 1990, the population of Arkansas was approximately 2,350,725, with 51 percent of the
population living in urban areas (fig. 3). The climate in Arkansas is generally mild in winter and
hot in summer. Average annual precipitation ranges from 44 to 56 inches (fig. 4). Arkansas is
divided into 75 counties (fig. 5).
GEOLOGY AND SOILS
The following discussion of geology and soils is based on Haley and others (1976);
Bennison (1986); Lowe (1989); Morris (1989); and Yates and Cullom (1973). A map of soil
associations is given in figure 6.
The oldest rocks of the Ozark Plateaus are Ordovician in age and underlie the Arkansas
portion of the Salem Plateau. The Lower Ordovician Jefferson City, Cotter, and Powell Dolomites
cover most of the northern part of the Salem Plateau and are composed of dolostone and minor
amounts of shale, siltstone, and sandstone. Moving south across the plateau, the rocks become
younger and are dominated by limestones and sandstones of the Middle Ordovician Everton
Formation and St. Peter Sandstone. The youngest Ordovician rocks are a series of limestones and
minor dolostones capped locally by the Cason Shale. Silurian and Devonian sedimentary rocks
crop out along the southeastern edge of the Salem Plateau and include limestone, marine black
shales, cherts, and minor sandstones. The black shales are notably uraniferous and are correlative
with the Chattanooga Shale. "The carbonate rocks and shales weather to form silty and clayey
loams that are deep in valleys but thin on the hillsides and are slowly to moderately permeable.
Sandstones form sandy loams of moderate permeability.
Mississippian-age sedimentary rocks of the Boone Formation underlie most of the
Springfield Plateau. These rocks are largely cherry limestones with minor shaly limestone and
. sandstone. Soils are clayey to cherry loams of slow to moderate permeability. Below the Boone,
lenses of the Chattanooga Shale within a thin sandstone have been found (Swanson and Landis,
1962). Isolated outcrops of uranium-bearing Chattanooga Shale are found throughout the
Springfield Plateau, but constitute only a small percentage of the total. The easternmost part of the
Springfield Plateau contains the Moorefield Shale as well as younger Mississippian sandstones,
black shales, and limestones which are also found in the Boston Mountains. The base of the
northernmost Boston Mountains are formed from limestone and black shale of Late Mississippian
age. The eastern half of the Boston Mountains are also underlain by the Early Pennsylvanian-age
Bloyd Shale and sandy limestones and silty shales of the Hale Formation. The western half of the
IV-6 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
POPULATION (1990)
El 0 to 10000
E3 10001to25000
E3 25001 to SOOOO
H 50001 to 100000
• 100001 to 349660
Figure 3. Population of counties in Arkansas (1990 U.S. Census data).
-------
56" 56"
0 10 20 30 <0 SO »'<'
W-
Figure 4. Average annual precipitation in Arkansas (from Facts on File, 1984).
-------
*>«00« I M9TC I VANtUMK
0 10 20 30 40
w-
Figure 5. Counties and county seats in Arkansas (from Facts on File, 1984),
-------
Figure 6. Generalized map of soil associations in Arkansas (after U.S. Soil Conservation
Service, 1982).
-------
Description of General Soil Map Units in Arkansas
Ozark Highlands
Cherty limestone and dolomite
Developed on cherty limestone, dolomite and minor calcareous shale and have slopes that are level
to gently sloping on plateaus and stream valleys and moderate to very steep slopes in mountain
areas. Soils are variable cherty silt loams to clay loams with very slow to moderate permeability and
are generally excessively to moderately well drained.
Sandstone and limestone
Developed on sandstone, limestone and dolomite and are gently sloping to very steep on uplands.
Soils are stony, sandy to clay loams, with slow to moderate permeability, and are well drained.
Boston Mountains
Developed on sandstone, siltstone and shale and are nearly level to moderately sloping in valleys and
on ridgetops and steep on hills and mountainsides. Soils are sandy clay loam, gravelly or stony, with
very slow to moderately rapid permeability, and are well drained.
Arkansas Valley and Ridges
Developed on sandstone, sStstpne and shale and are level to gently sloping in valleys and on
ridgetops and moderately sloping to very steep on Mils and mountainsides. Soils vary from siliy or
sandy clay loam to silt clay with some gravelly arid stony areas, very slow to moderately rapid
permeability, and poorly to well drained.
Ouachita Mountains .
Developed on shale, slate, quartzite, novaculite, and sandstone and are level to gently sloping in
valleys and moderately sloping to steep on mountainsides. Soils are sand or silt clay loam to silt
clay, gravelly or shaly with very slow to rapid permeability, atid are well to excessively drained,
Bottom Lands and Terraces
Developed in clayey, loamy, or sandy alluvium and are generally level to gently sloping with some
escarpments being moderately steep. Soils are silt or sand loarn to silt clay, poorly to excessively
drained, and have slow permeability, some sandy loams have moderate to rapid permeability.
Coastal Plain
Developed on clayey, loamy, or sandy marine sediments and are generally level to nearly level on
flood plains and terraces and nearly level 'to moderately steep on uplands. Soils are silt to sand loam
and silt clay with moderate to slow permeability, and are moderately well drained to well drained
with locally poor drainage. .
Loessial Plains and Hills
Loessial Plains " •'
Developed on loess and are level to nearly level with a few areas moderately sloping. Soils are silt
loam and silt clay loam with very slow to slow permeability, and are poorly to moderately well
drained.
Loessial Hills
Developed on loess and have slopes that are nearly level to steep. Soils are silt loam and silt clay
loam, with moderately to moderately slow permeability, and are moderately to well drained.
Blackland Prairies
Soils are developed from clayey sediments overlying beds of marly clay or chalk and have slopes
that are nearly level to moderately steep. Soils are silt loam to clay with very slow permeability and
are moderately to well drained.
-------
Boston Mountains is capped by the sandstones and shales of the Atoka Formation. Soils are sand
and clay loams that are generally well drained and slowly to moderately permeable.
The Ouachita Mountains Province includes the Arkansas Valley, the Fourche Mountains,
the Central Ouachita Mountains, and the Athens Plateau. Most of the Arkansas Valley is also
underlain by the Atoka Formation, which is divided into lower, middle, and upper parts on the
State geologic map (Haley and others, 1976) in this area. The western Arkansas Valley is
underlain by upper Pennsylvanian sedimentary rocks that include sandstones, black shales, and
commercial-grade coal. Soils are variable but are generally slowly to moderately permeable and
classified as sandy, silty, or clayey loams.
The northern Fourche Mountains are underlain by shales and sandstones of the Lower
Atoka Formation. The southern Fourche Mountains are underlain by the Lower Pennsylvanian
Johns Valley Shale and Jackfork Sandstone as well as the extensive Mississippian-age Stanley
Shale. The Lower Pennsylvanian rocks include sandstones, black shales, and minor limestones
and cherry limestones. Soils are generally clayey to sandy loams of moderate permeability. The
Stanley Shale surrounds the Central Ouachita Mountains and underlies most of the Athens Plateau.
It is made up of siliceous to micaceous shales, sandstones, and a tuff near the base of the group.
Soils are silty clays and silty loarns of moderate permeability. The Jackfork Sandstone and lower
part of the Atoka Formation are also exposed in the south-central Athens Plateau.
The ridges of the Central Ouaehita Mountains consist of highly folded and intensely
deformed Ordovician and Silurian shales and sandstones with minor chert and limestone. Soils are
silty clays and silty loams of low to moderate permeability. The Arkansas Novaculite, of
Mississippian-Devonian age, is exposed along the outer edge of the Central Ouachita Mountains.
The Arkansas Novaculite is chert that is rarely calcareous, may include silt -and sand-size quartz
grains, and contains black shale in the middle part of the formation.
Igneous rocks, predominantly syenite, make up a small portion of the Ouachita Province
and also intrude the Tertiary sediments of the Coastal Plain. The main mass of intrusions occurs
on the southeastern side of the OuacMta, although dikes are scattered throughout the uplift
Principal exposures of igneous rocks are found in Pulaski, Garland, Saline, and Hot Spring
County. Rare-earth elements are associated with the syenite in Garland and Hot Springs Counties
and may also be a source of uranium and thorium, especially where they are hosted in carbonatite.
The Coastal Plain Province consists of the West Gulf Coastal Plain and the Mississippi
Alluvial Plain, including the loess hills of Crowley's Ridge. Except for a few small areas, much of
the Mississippi Alluvial Plain consists of recent alluvium and terraces deposited by the flood waters
of the Mississippi River and its tributaries. These recent sediments vary from coarse to fine
material having from rapid to slow permeability. Tertiary-age marine sediments form the base of
Crowley's Ridge and cover large areas of the West Gulf Coastal Plain. The Tertiary sediments are
composed of coarse-grained quartzose and glauconitic sand, clay, and gravel, as well as bauxite,
JUgnite, phosphate, and marl deposits. Most soils are sandy loams and minor silt and clay loams
with moderate to moderately rapid permeability. Nepheline syenite intrudes sediments of the
Midway and Wilcox Groups, which contain commercial deposits of bauxite. Diamond-bearing
lamproite intrudes the Lower Cretaceous Trinity Group near Murfreesboro. The West Gulf
Coastal Plain is also cut by several major rivers that deposited river alluvium and terraces similar to
those in the Mississippi Alluvial Plain. The loess soils of Crowley's Ridge are composed of wind-
blown silt that forms silt loam with moderate permeability.
IV-12 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
INDOOR RADON DATA
Indoor radon data from 1535 homes sampled in the State/EPA Residential Radon Survey
conducted in Arkansas during the winter of 1990-91 are shown in Table 1 and illustrated in figure
7. Figure 5 is a map of the counties .for reference. The maximum value recorded in the survey
was 24,2 pCi/L in Benton County. The average screening indoor radon level for the state was 1.2
pCi/L and 5.3 percent of the homes tested had indoor radon levels exceeding 4 pCi/L. The most
notable counties include Benton and Boone, with indoor radon county averages greater than
3 pCi/L, and Baxter, Fulton, Garland, Montgomery, and Polk, with indoor radon county averages
between 2-3 pCi/L. The map patterns in figure 7 show that the southern third of Arkansas has the
lowest radon, while the west-central and northernmost parts of the State have higher indoor radon.
With reference to physiographic regions, it appears that the Salem and Springfield Plateaus are the
areas of moderate to locally high indoor radon, whereas Crowley's Ridge, the Arkansas Valley,
the Ouachita, Fourche, and Boston Mountains, and possibly parts of the Mississippi Alluvial
Plain, are mixtures of low to moderate indoor radon. The Gulf Coastal Plain is an area of low
indoor radon. Indoor radon data in this area are sparse, and few homes have basements.
RADIOMETRICDATA . '
An aeroradiometric map of Arkansas (fig. 8) compiled from spectral gamma-ray data
acquired during the U.S. Department of Energy's National Uranium Resource Evaluation (NURE)
program (Duval and others, 1989) shows two belts of relatively Hgher equivalent uranium (eU)
than the rest of the S state: one in the northeast corner of the State, and one running from east to
west in the north-central part of the State. For the purposes of this report, low (eU) is defined as
less than 1.5 parts per million (ppm), moderate eU is defined as 1.5-2.5 ppm, and high eU is
defined as greater than 2.5 ppm. Low eU is associated with Mississrppian limestones and shales
in the Springfield Plateau, the Gulf Coastal Plain sediments, and parts of the Central Ouachita and
Athens Plateau. Moderate eU is found throughout the Sstate associated with the Upper Cretaceous
• and lower Tertiary Gulf Coastal Plain sediments, parts of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain, Crowley's
Ridge, the shales, dolostones, and limestones of the Salem Plateau, and much of the Central
Ouachitas, especially the Devonian-Silurian sedimentary rocks and, possibly, the syenite intrusive
rocks. Small areas of high eU appear to be associated with loess on Crowley's Ridge, some of the
Quaternary sediments in the northern Mississippi Alluvial Plain, the Atoka Formation in the
Arkansas Valley, the Cotter and Jefferson City Dolomites, and the shales in the Salem Plateau.
The high equivalent uranium in the Mississippi Alluvial. Plain may be associated with the loess
content of the plain or may be cultural, possibly the result of uranium in phosphate fertilizers, a
common occurrence in heavy agricultural areas. High to moderate eU in the Arkansas Valley may
also be associated with the use of fertilizers in this area.
/ >
GEOLOGIC RADON POTENTIAL
/
A comparison of the aerial radioactivity map for Arkansas with the State geologic and soils
maps and the indoor radon data allows us to make some observations about the geologic radon
potential of the State. ,
The carbonate soils and black shales in the Springfield and Salem Plateaus are considered
moderate to locally high in geologic radon potential. The Ordovician limestones, dolomites,
IV-13 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
Bsmt & 1st Floor Rn
' %>4pCML
w-WVI Oto10
8 53 10 to 20
3 EH 20 to 30
50 Miles
Bsmt. & 1st Floor Rn
Average Concentration (pCi/L)
' 0.0 to 1.9
7 E3 2.0 to 4.0
1 1 4.1 to 5.0
Figure 7. Screening indoor radon data from the State/EPA Residential Radon Survey of
Arkansas, 1990-91, for counties with.5 or more measurements. Data are from 2-7 day charcoal
canister tests. Histograms in map legends show the number of counties in each category. The
number of samples in each county (see Table 1) may not be sufficient to statistically characterize
the radon levels of the counties, but they do suggest general trends. Unequal category intervals
were chosen to provide reference to decision and action levels.
-------
TABLE 1. Screening indoor radon data from the EPA/State Residential Radon Survey of
Arkansas conducted during 1990-91. Data represent 2-7 day charcoal canister measurements
from the lowest level of each home tested. ,
COUNTY
ARKANSAS
ASHLEY
BAXTER
BENTON
BOONE
BRADLEY
CALHOUN
CARROLL
CfflCOT
CLARK
CLAY
CLEBURNE '
CLEVELAND
COLUMBIA
CONWAY
CRAIGHEAD .
CRAWFORD
CRITTENDEN
CROSS
DALLAS
DESHA
DREW
FAULKNER
FRANKLIN
FULTON
GARLAND
GRANT
GREENE
HEMPSTEAD
HOT SPRING
HOWARD
INDEPENDENCE
IZARD
JACKSON
JEFFERSON
JOHNSON
LAFAYETTE
LAWRENCE
LEE
LINCOLN
LITTLE RIVER
NO. OF
MEAS.
11
6
33
' 80
18
9
6
7
12
11
17
13
5
16
24
31
25
18
4
2
7
14
71
10
7
65
, 9
9
10
17
7
22
18
9
33
16
13
12
4
6
8
MEAN
0.9
0.8
2.9
3.0
3.2
0.6
0.3
5.0
0.6
0.5
1.1
1.5
0.4
0.5
0.6
1.1
0.8
0.5
1;0
0.1
0.2
0.8
0.9
0.9
2.6
2.3
0.7
0.6
0.3
0.6
1,0
1.4.
1.9
1.8
0.5
1.0
0.6
1.3
1.3
0.5
0,3
GEOM.
MEAN
0.5
0.3
1.4
1.6
2.3
0.4
0.2
1.4
0.3
0.3
0.5
0.9
0.2
0.3
'0.4
0.8
0.5
0.4
0.7
0.1
0.1
0.5
0.6
0.5
' 2.1
1.5
0.6
03
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
0.6
0.3
0.7
0.4
1.0
1.2
0.3
0.2
MEDIAN
0.7
0.6
1.2
1.4,
2.2
0.4
0.2
0.7
0.4
0.4
0.7
0.8
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.7
0.8
0.4
1.0
0.1
0.2
0.8
0.7
0.6
2.0
1.5
0.5
0.6
0.3
0.5
0.5
1.1
1.3
0.5
0.3
0.6
0.4
1.0
, 1.3
0.3
0.3
STD.
DEV.
0.8
0.8
, 3.7
43
3.3
0.5
0.3
7,9
0.8
0.5
1.9
1.7
0.4
0.5
0.5
1.2
0.8
0.4
0.8
0.1
0,1
0.6
0.9
1.0
1.6
2.2
0.3
0.8
0.3
0.6
1.2
1.5
2.0
3.3
0.5
0,8
0.6
0.9
0.6
0.5
0.2
MAXIMUM
2.8
2.0
15.7
24.2
12.6
1.8
0.8
20.8
2.0
1.8
8.0
6.6
0.8
1.8
1.7
6.6
2.3
1.5
2.0
0.2
0.3
1,8
4.5
3.3
5.1
11.1
1.2
2.5
0.9
2.2
3.5
5.9
7.9
10.5
2.3
2,5'
1.6
3,2
2.0
1.2
0.7
%>4pCi/L
0
0
27
20
17
0
0
29
0
0
6
8
0
0
0
3
0,
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
29
15
0
0
0
0
0
9
11
11
0
0
-0
0
0
0
0
%>20 pCi/L
0
0
0
4
0
0
0
14
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
- 0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
-------
TABLE 1 (continued). Screening indoor radon data for Arkansas.
COUNTY
LOGAN
LONOKE
MADISON
MARION
MILLER
MISSISSIPPI
MONROE
MONTGOMERY
NEVADA
NEWTON
OUACHTTA
PERRY
PHILLIPS
PIKE
POINSETT
POLK
POPE
PRAIRIE
PULASKI
RANDOLPH
SALINE
SCOTT
SEARCY
SEBASTIAN
SEVIER
SHARP
ST. FRANCIS
STONE
UNION
VAN BUREN
WASHINGTON
WHITE
WOODRUFF
YELL
NO. OF
MEAS.
31
51
8
11
10
14
6
20
8
12
21
10
5
13
10
16
57
8
127
5
36
20
10
68
11
12
9
21
42
14
63
48
1
22
MEAN
1.0
0.7
1.5
1.1
0.1
1.2
0.7
2.3
0.5
1.7
0.4
1.0
0.6
1.0
0.9
2.0
1.3
0.7
0.9
1.3
1.6
0.7
0.8
0.7
1.2
1.6
0.7
1.0
0.5
1.6
1.6
1.2
1.2
0.9
GEOM.
MEAN
0.7
0.5
1.1
0.7
0.1
0.6
0.5
1.2
0.3
0.9
0.3
0.6
0.5
0.7
0.5
1.0
0.7
0.3
0.6
1.1
0.9
0.5
0.5
0.5
0.6
1.2
0.5
0.8
0.3
0.9
1.1
0.6
1.2
0.6
MEDIAN
0.8
0.5
1.1
1.2
0.1
0.8
0.7
1.7
0.3
1.6
, 0.5
0.8
0.4
0.8
0.6
1.0
0.7
0.5
0.6
1.3
0.9
0.5
0.7
0.5
0.8
1.2
0.7
0.9
0.4
0.9
1.1
0.7
1.2
0.8
STB.
DEV.
0.8
0.5
1,1
0.8
0.3
1.4
0.4
2.1
0.6
1.2
0.3
0.8
0.4
0.7
0.9
2.7
1.7
0.8
1.4
0,6
2.4
,0.6
0.9
0.8
1.4
1.2
0.6
0.9
0,4
1.7
1.8
1.9
0.0
0.8
MAXIMUM
3.1
2.7
3.8
2.3
0.6
4.9
1.2
7,9
1.7
3.7
0.8
2,5
1.1
2.1
2.9
10.1
8.3
2.2
15.2
1.9
14.2
2.1
3.0
3.7
4.8
4.2
2.0
4.3
1.8
5.9
12.8
11,5
1.2
2.7
%>4pCi/L
0
0
0
0
0
• 7
0
20
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
13
7
0
2
0
6
o-
0
0
9
8
0
5
0
14
3
' 4
0
0
%>20 pCi/L
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
-------
Figure 8. Aerial radiometric map of Arkansas (after Duval and others, 1989). Contour lines at 1.5
and 2.5 ppm equivalent uranium (ell). Pixels shaded at 0.5 pprn elJ increments. ,
-------
black shales, and sandstones have moderate to high equivalent uranium associated with them and
some of the highest radon in the State is associated with them. The Mississippian limestones and
shales, however, have low equivalent uranium associated with them but also have moderate to high
levels of indoor radon associated with them, including the highest indoor radon level recorded in
the State/EPA Residential Radon Survey in the State in Benton County. Black shales and
carbonaceous sandstones within the Mississippian, Devonian, and Qrdovician units are the likely
cause of the local areas of high elJ (fig. 8). The Chattanooga Shale is particularly well known for
containing uranium in above-average amounts (Glover, 1959), and most marine black shales have
elevated levels of uranium (> 5 ppm) concentrated with organics or in phosphate. Strata of the
Chattanooga below the Mississippian limestones and shales, and the shale units within the
Mississippian limestones may be responsible for'some of the high indoor radon levels found in
Benton County. Carbonate rocks are usually low in radionuclide elements but the soils developed
from carbonate rocks may be elevated in uranium and radium. Carbonate soils are derived from
the dissolution of the calcium carbonate (CaCOs) that makes up the majority of the rock. When the
CaCOs has been dissolved away, the soils are enriched in the remaining impurities, predominantly
base metals, including radionuclides. Rinds containing high concentrations of uranium and
uranium minerals can be formed on the surfaces of rocks involved with CaCOs dissolution and
karstrfication. Karst and cave morphology is also thought to accumulate radon. Carbonate soils
derived from Cambrian-Qrdovician rock units of the Valley and Ridge Province cause indoor radon
problems in eastern Tennessee, western New Jersey, western Virginia, eastern West Virginia
(Schultz and others, 1992) and central and eastern Pennsylvania.
The Boston Mountains, Arkansas Valley, Fourche Mountains, and Athens Plateau are
underlain predominantly by Mississippian and Pennsylvanian sandstones and shales with low to
moderate radon potential. The marine black shales are most likely uraniferous and the Upper
Atoka Formation and Savanna Formation have high (>2.5 ppm) elJ associated with them. Finch
(1967) has reported uranium occurrences in carbonaceous sandstone in.the Jackfork Sandstone in
Montgomery County and in the Atoka Formation in Crawford County. Greater than 5 ppm
uranium is also reported for shales in the Atoka Formation by Vine (1962). The presence of radon
and uranium in some natural gas, petroleum and asphaltite is well known (for a short review see
Tanner, 1980). Rare asphaltite is reported in the Jackfork sandstone and in some of the Cretaceous
sandstones in Arkansas (Chenoweth, 1989). Oil and gas is also known to occur with the upper
Pennsylvanian sediments in the Arkansas Valley. Many of these units are similar to units in
Oklahoma that contain uranium associated with coaly and petroliferous rocks (Bell, 1960; Vine,
1962). Although the indoor radon average for these provinces is low, there are a number of
counties in these provinces with averages slightly higher than 1 pQ/L and maximum readings
greater than 4 pCi/L. The marine black shales and carbonaceous sandstones are the likely source
for the locally elevated indoor radon. However, radon from a hydrocarbon source should hot be
ruled out
The Central Ouachita Mountains are underlain by intensely deformed Ordovician and
Silurian shales and sandstones with minor chert and limestone. These rocks generally have low to
moderate radon potential. Aerial radiometric signatures of 2.5 ppm elJ or more are associated with
the Ordovician black shales and possibly with some of the'syenite intrusions. Uranium was also
reported to occur in carbonaceous material from one of the Ordovician sandstones in western
Montgomery County by Finch (1967). Indoor radon in the Central Ouachita Mountains is low to
moderate and permeability of the soils is low to moderate.
IV-18 . Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
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The West Gulf Coastal Plain is generally low in radon potential. Parts of the Cretaceous
and Tertiary sediments have moderate eU in the 1.5-2.5 ppm range. Recent studies in the Coastal '
Plain of Texas, Alabama, and New Jersey show that glauconite and phosphate in sandstones,
chalks, marls, .and limestones, as well as black organic clays, shales, and muds ,are often
associated with high concentrations of uranium and radon to the sediment (Gundersen and others,
1991). Several formations within the Gulf Coastal Plain contain these types of sediments,
especially parts of the upper Cretaceous and lower Tertiary sedimentary section; however, average
indoor radon levels in this area are not elevated. The Quaternary sediments of the Coastal Plain
have low eU and the indoor radon average is low for the Gulf Coastal Plain overall.
The Mississippi Alluvial Plain and Crowley's Ridge have low to locally moderate radon
potential. The southern half of the Mississippi Alluvial Plain is made up predominantly of
quartzose sediments, has generally low eU, and has low indoor radon. The northern half of the
alluvial plain, however, includes the loess of Crowley's Ridge, which appears to have high
equivalent uranium associated with it (fig. 8), and possibly a high loess content to the surrounding
sediments to general. The northeastern corner of Arkansas appears to be crossed by the large belt
of loess that continues into Kentucky and Tennessee and shows as a distinct area of high eU on the
radiometric map of the United States (Duval and others, 1989). Soil radon concentrations greater
than 1000 pCi/L have been measured to the loess to Tennessee (Peake and Gundersen, 198,9).
Several of the counties to the northern part of the alluvial plain have maximum indoor radon values
greater than 4 pCi/L and averages between 1 and 2 pCi/L, which are generally higher than
surrounding .counties. As mentioned before, the high eU may also be due to uranium to
phosphatic fertilizers to agricultural areas. , . '
SUMMARY . . , '
For the purpose of this assessment, Arkansas has been divided into nine geologic radon
potential areas and each area assigned a Radon Index (RI) and a Confidence Index (CI) score
(Table 2). These areas correspond to the areas delineated in figure 1. The RI is-a relative measure
of radon potential based on geology, soils, radioactivity, architecture, and indoor radon, as '
outlined in the preceding sections. The CI is a measure of the confidence of the RI assessment
based on the quality and quantity of the data used to assess geologic radon potential. Please refer
to the introduction at the beginning of this regional book for a detailed explanation of the indexes.
Areas of moderate to locally high geologic radon potential include the Springfield Plateau
and the Salem Plateau. Low to moderate geologic radon potential has been assigned to the
northern Mississippi Alluvial Plain, Crowley's Ridge, the Boston and Fourche Mountains, the
Arkansas Valley, the Central Ouachita Mountains, and the Athens Plateau. The southern
Mississippi River Alluvial Plato and the West Gulf Coastal Plain have low geologic radon
potential.
, " Uraniferous marine black shales, carbonaceous sandstone, and soils derived from dolomite
and limestone appear to be the principal sources for radon to the State. Other possible local
sources of radon include areas of uranium mineralization associated with the syenite totrusives to
the Central Ouachita Mountains and Gulf Coastal Plata; loess on Crowley's Ridge; glauconitic, ' f
phosphatic, and carbonaceous sediments in the Gulf Coastal Plato; and coaly or petroleum-rich
sediments to central Arkansas.
Climate and architecture probably play a significant role to the overall low to moderate
radon potential of the State. Most of the housing to Arkansas is, slab-on- grade, crawl space, or \
IV-19 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
without basements which contributes to the overall low indoor radon average. The warm climate
of,Arkansas, lifestyle of the inhabitants, and home ventilation practices also contribute significantly
to lower indoor radon.
This is a generalized assessment of the State's geologic radon potential and there is no
substitute for having a home tested. .The conclusions about radon potential presented in this report
cannot be applied to individual homes or building sites. Indoor radon levels, both high and low,
can be quite localized, and within any radon potential area there will likely be areas with .higher or
lower radon potential that assigned to the area as a whole. Any local decisions about radon should
not be made without consulting all available local data! For additional information on radon and
how to test, contact your State radon program or EPA regional office. More detailed information
on state or local geology may be obtained from the state geological survey. Addresses and phone
numbers for these agencies are listed in chapter 1 of this booklet
IV-20 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
TABLE 2. Radon Index and Confidence Index scores for areas in Arkansas.
, FACTOR
INDOOR RADON
RADIOACTIVITY
GEOLOGY
SOIL PERM.
ARCHITECTURE
GFE POINTS
TOTAL
Springfield Plateau Salem Plateau
RI CI RI Q
2
2
2
2
1
0
9
Mod
3 .
3
• . 2
3
11
High
2
2
2
2l
, 1
,0
9
Mod
3
3
2
3
11
High
Arkansas Valley
- RI CI
1
2
2
2
1
0
8
Low
3
3 ,
'2
2
10
High
Fourche Mountains
Central Ouachita
Athens Plateau
and Boston Mountains
FACTOR
INDOOR RADON
RADIOACTIVITY
GEOLOGY
SOIL PERM.
ARCHITECTURE
GFE POINTS
TOTAL
-FACTOR
INDOOR RADON
RADIOACTIVITY
GEOLOGY
SOIL PERM.
ARCHITECTURE
GFE POINTS
TOTAL
RI
1
2
2
2
1
0
8
Low
CI
3 .
3
2
- 2
-
10
High
West Gulf
Coastal Plain
RI CI
1
1
2
2
1
0
7
Low
2
3
2
2 .
.
-
9
Mod'
RI
2
2
' 2
2
1
0
9
a
3
3
2
2
-
.
10
Mod High
RI
1
2
2
2
1
0
8
Mississippi
Alluvial Plain
CI
1
3
2
2
.
-
8
Low Mod
RI
1
2
2
•2
1
0
8
Low
CI
2
3
2
2
-
-
9
M)d
Crowley's
Ridge
RI CI
1
3
2
2
1
0
9
Mod
1
3
2 .
2
-
-
. 8
Mod
RADON INDEX SCORING:
Radon potential category
Point range
Probable screening indoor
radon average for area
LOW 3-8 points
MODERATE/VARIABLE 9-11 points
HIGH > 11 points
Possible range of points = 3 to 17
CONFIDENCE INDEX SCORING:
<2pCi/L -
2-4pCi/L
>4pCi/L
LOW CONFIDENCE
MODERATE CONFIDENCE
HIGH CONFIDENCE
4-6 points
7-9 points
10 -12 points
Possible range of points = 4 to 12
IV-21 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
REFERENCES CITED IN THIS REPORT
AND GENERAL REFERENCES PERTAINING TO RADON IN ARKANSAS
Arndt, R.H. and Kuroda, P.K., 1953, Radioactivity of rivers and lakes in parts of Garland and
Hot Spring Counties, Arkansas: Economic Geology, v. 48, p. 551-567.
Bell, K. G., I960, Uranium and other trace elements in Petroleum and rock asphalts: U.S.
Geological Survey Professional Paper 356-B, p. 45-65.
Bennison, A.P., 1986, Geologic Highway map of the Mid-Continent Region, The American
Association of Petroleum Geologists, Tulsa Oklahoma, 1 plate with text.
Chenoweth, P.A., 1989, Hydrocarbons of the Ouachita trend, m Hatcher, R.D., Jr., Thomas,
W.A., and Viele, G.W. (eds.), The Geology of North America, volume F-2, The
AppalacMan-Ouachita Orogen in the United States: Geological Society of America,
p. 739-746. ,
Duval, J.S., Jones, W.J., Riggle, F.R., and Pitkin, J.A., 1989, Equivalent uranium map of
conterminous United States: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 89-478,10 p.
Ellison, R.J., 1985, The geophysical characterization of the Arkansas seismic zone, the Arkoma
Basin, Arkansas: Master's Thesis, Southern Illinois Univ., Carbondale, IL, 67 p.
Ellison, RJ. and Malinconieo, L.L., Jr., 1984, Radon surveys across the central Arkansas
seismic swarm: Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, v. 65, p. 243.
Finch, W., 1967, Geology of epigenetic uranium deposits in sandstone in the United States: U.S.
Geological Survey Professional Paper 538,121 p.
Gavini, M.B., Beck, J.N. and Kuroda, P.K., 1974, Mean residence times of the long-lived radon
daughters in the atmosphere: Journal of Geophysical Research, v. 79, p. 4447-4452.
Glover, L., 1959 Stratigraphy and uranium content of the Chattanooga Shale in northeastern
Alabama, northwestern Georgia, and eastern Tennessee: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin
1087-E, 168 p., 3 plates.
Gundersen, L.C.S., Peake, R.T., Latske, G.D., Hauser, L.M. and Wiggs, C.R., 1991, A
statistical summary of uranium and radon in soils from the Coastal Plain of Texas,
Alabama, and New Jersey, in Proceedings of the 1990 Symposium on Radon and Radon
Reduction Technology, Vol. 3: Symposium Poster Papers: Research Triangle Park,
N.C., U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Rept. EPA6QO/9-91-026c, p. 6T35--6-47.
Hafey, B.R., and others, 1976, Geologic Map of Arkansas, U.S. Geological Survey map
G75197, scale 1:500,000,
Liou, J.C., 1983., Atmospheric injection of radon daughters from the 1982 eruption of El Chichon
Volcano: Doctoral Thesis, Univ. Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, 97 jx
IV-22 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
Lowe, D.R., 1989, Stratigraphy, sedimentology, and depositional setting of pre^orogenic rocks of
the.OuacMta Mountains, Arkansas and Oklahoma, in Hatcher and others (eds.), The
. Appalachian-Ouachita Qrogen in the United States: Geological Society of America,
Geology of North America, v. F-2, p. 575-590.
Malinconico, L.L., Jr. and Ellison, R.J., 1984, Integrated gravity, magnetic, and radon surveys
across the central Arkansas seismic swarm: Geological Society of America, Abstracts with
Programs, v. 16, p. 583. „ . -
Morris, R.C., 1989, Stratigraphy, and sedimentary history of post-Arkansas Novaculite
Carboniferous rocks of the Ouachita Mountains: in Hatcher, R.D. Jr. and others (eds.),
The Appalachian-Ouachita Qrogen in the United States: Geological Society of America,
Geology of North America, V..F-2, p. 591-602.
Peake, R.T., and Gundersen, L.C.S., 1989, The Coastal Plain of the eastern and southern United
States—An area of low radon potential: Geological Society of America, Abstracts with
Programs, v. 21, no. 2, p. 58. , .
*
Schultz, A.P., Wiggs, C.R., and Brower, S.D., 1992, Geologic and environmental implications
of high soil-gas radon qoncentrations in the Great Valley, Jefferson and Berkeley Counties,
West Virginia, in Gates, A.E., and Gundersen, L.C.S. (eds), Geologic controls on radon:
Geological Society of America Special Paper 271, p. 29-44. ,
Steele, S.R., 1983, Mid-continent earthquakes'preeeded by radon anomalies at local and regional
. . distances, 1981-83: Eos, Transactions, American Geophysical Union, v. 64, p. 757-758.
Steele, S.R., 1984^ Anomalous radon emanation at local and regional distances preceding ,
earthquakes in the New Madrid seismic zone and adjacent areas of the central mid-continent
of North America, 1981-84: Pure and Applied Geophysics, v. 122, p. 353-368.
Swanson, V.E., 1960, Oil yield and uranium content of black shales: U.S. Geological Survey,
Professional, Paper 356-A, p. 1-44.
Swanson, V.E., and Landis, G.L., 1962, Geology of a uranium-bearing black shale of Late
Devonian age in north-central Arkansas: Arkansas Geological and Conservation
Commission, Information circular 22,16 p.
Tanner, A.B., 1980, Radon migration in the ground: a supplementary review, in Gesell, T.F.,
and Lowder, W:M. (eds.), Natural Radiation Environment ffi,: Springfield, Va., NTIS;
U.S. Dept. Energy Rept. CONF-780422, Vol. 1, p. 5-56.
U1S- Soil Conservation Service, 1982, General soil map, State of Arkansas: University of
Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service map, scale 1:750,000.
Vine, J.D., 1962, Geology of uranium in ctialy carbonaceous rocks: U.S. Geological Survey
Professional Paper. 356-D, p. 113-170.
Yates, J., and Cullom, R. (eds.), 1973, Atlas of Arkansas: Arkansas Department of Planning,
Little Rock, 99 p.
IV-23 Reprinted from USGS Open-File Report 93-292-F
-------
Page Intentionally Blank
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EPA's Map of Radon Zones
The USGS1 Geologic Radon Province Map is the technical foundation for EPA's Map
of Radon Zones. The Geologic Radon Province Map defines the radon potential for
approximately 360 geologic provinces. EPA has adapted this information to fit a county
boundary map in order to produce the Map of Radon Zones.
The Map of Radon Zones is based on the same range of predicted screening levels of
indoor radon as USGS' Geologic Radon Province Map. EPA defines the three zones as
follows: Zone One areas have an average predicted indoor radon screening potential greater
than 4 pCi/L. Zone Two areas are predicted to have an average indoor radon screening
potential between 2 pCi/L and 4 pCi/L. Zone Three areas are predicted to have an average
indoor radon screening potential less than 2 pCi/L.
Since the, geologic proyince boundaries cross state and county boundaries, a strict
translation of counties from the Geologic Radon Province Map to the Map of. Radon Zones
was not possible. For counties that have variable radon potential (i.e., are located in two or
more provinces of different rankings), the counties were assigned to a zone based on the
.predicted radon potential of the province in which most of its area lies. (See Part I for more
details!) . • • •
ARKANSAS MAP OF RADON ZONES _ . ,
The Arkansas Map of Radon Zones and its supporting documentation (Part IV of this
report) have received extensive review by Arkansas geologists and radon program experts.
The map for Arkansas generally reflects current State knowledge about radon for its counties.
Some States have been able to conduct radon investigations in areas smaller than geologic
provinces and counties, so it is important to consult locally available data.
Although the information provided in Part IV of this report r- the State chapter entitled
"Preliminary Geologic Radon Potential Assessment of Arkansas" — may appear to be quite
specific, it cannot be applied to determine the radon levels of a neighborhood, housing tract,
individual house, etc. THE ONLY WAY TO DETERMINE IF A HOUSE HAS
ELEVATED INDOOR RADON IS TO TEST. .Contact the Region 6 EPA office or the
Arkansas radon program for information on testing and. fixing homes. Telephone numbers
and addresses can be found in Part II of this report. . ' - ,
V-l
-------
ARKANSAS - EPA Map of Radon Zones
The purpose of this map is to assist National, State and local organizations
to target their resources and to implement radon-rasbtant building codes.
This map Is not intended to determine if a home in a given zone should be tested
for radon. Homes with elevated levels of radon have been found In all three
zones. All homes should be tested, regardless of zone doslgnetlon.
Zone 1
Zone 2
Zone 3
IMPORTANT: Consult the publication entitled "Preliminary Geologic Radon
Potential Assessment of Arkansas" before using this map. This
document contains information on radon potential variations within counties.
EPA also recommends that this map be supplemented with any available
beat data in order to further understand and predict the radon potential of a
specific area.
-------