Have a personal or library account? Click to login
Suitability of rocks and sediments from Brzeszcze and Silesia coal mines as building materials in terms of radiological hazard Cover

Suitability of rocks and sediments from Brzeszcze and Silesia coal mines as building materials in terms of radiological hazard

Open Access
|Apr 2019

References

  1. 1. Polish Ministry Board. (2002, October). The order of Polish Ministry Board from 29.10.2002 on the national waste management plan. Monitor Polski, 2003, no. 11, item 159 (in Polish).
  2. 2. Zalewski, M., Tomczak, M., & Kapata, J. (2001). Radioactivity of building materials available in northeastern Poland. Pol. J. Environ. Stud., 10(3), 183–188.
  3. 3. Piotrowska, B., Fujak, M., Isajenko, K., & Krawczyńska, S. (2016). Building materials radioactivity in Poland. Bezpieczeństwo i Technika Pożarnicza, 44(4), 151–158 (in Polish).10.12845/bitp.44.4.2016.12
  4. 4. Pawuła, A. (1998). On the need for use of radiologic criteria in construction site evaluation. In Symposium: Recent Engineering Geological Problems in Poland (pp. 83–88). Poznań: Instytut Geologii UAM, WIND (in Polish).
  5. 5. Central Laboratory of Radiation Protection. (2014). Analysis of the natural radioactivity of raw and building materials in Poland in the period 1979–2012. Warsaw: CLOR.
  6. 6. Canberra. (2002). Detector specifications and performance data – Model GX4020 – 7915,30, S/N b 01010.
  7. 7. Jodlowski, P. (2005). Spektrometria promieniowania gamma prób środowiskowych; nuklidy promieniotwórcze w środowisku przyrodniczym Gorców. Unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, AGH University of Science and Technology, Kraków.
  8. 8. Council of Ministers. (2007, January). Regulation of the Council of Ministers of 2 January 2007 on the requirements for the content of natural radionuclides potassium 40K, radium 226Ra and thorium 228Th in row materials used in residence intended for human and livestock and also industrial waste used in construction and control of the content of these isotopes. Dz.U., 2007, no. 4, item 29 (in Polish).
  9. 9. European Commission. (1999). Radiation Protection 112: Radiological Protection Principles Concerning the Natural Radioactivity of Building Materials. Directorate – General Environment. Nuclear Safety and Civil Protection.
  10. 10. UNSCEAR. (2000). Sources and effects of ionizing radiation. Report of the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects of Atomic Radiation to the General Assembly. New York, USA.
  11. 11. Beretka, J., & Mathew, P. J. (1985). Natural radioactivity of Australian building materials. Industrial wastes and by-products. Health Phys., 48, 87–95.10.1097/00004032-198501000-00007
  12. 12. Yu, K. N., Guan, Z. J., Stokes, M. J., & Young, E. C. M. (1992a). The assessment of the natural radiation dose committed to the Hong Kong people. J. Environ. Radioact., 17, 31–48.10.1016/0265-931X(92)90033-P
  13. 13. Central Laboratory of Radiation Protection. (2006). Radiological atlas of Poland 2005. Warsaw: CLOR.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/nuka-2019-0008 | Journal eISSN: 1508-5791 | Journal ISSN: 0029-5922
Language: English
Page range: 65 - 70
Submitted on: Oct 31, 2017
Accepted on: Feb 1, 2019
Published on: Apr 24, 2019
Published by: Institute of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2019 Monika Śleziak, Marek Duliński, published by Institute of Nuclear Chemistry and Technology
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.