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  2. Radium and radon in the environment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radium_and_radon_in_the...

    Radium, like radon, is radioactive and is found in small quantities in nature and is hazardous to life if radiation exceeds 20-50 mSv/year. Radium is a decay product of uranium and thorium. [2] Radium may also be released into the environment by human activity: for example, in improperly discarded products painted with radioluminescent paint.

  3. Radon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radon

    In the 1940s and 1950s, radon produced from a radium source was used for industrial radiography. [124] Other X-ray sources such as 60 Co and 192 Ir became available after World War II and quickly replaced radium and thus radon for this purpose, being of lower cost and hazard. [125]

  4. Health effects of radon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_effects_of_radon

    Radon has been used in implantable seeds, made of gold or glass, primarily used to treat cancers. The gold seeds were produced by filling a long tube with radon pumped from a radium source, the tube being then divided into short sections by crimping and cutting.

  5. History of radiation protection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_radiation...

    Radon experiments at the Radium Institute in Paris, 1924. Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive noble gas discovered in 1900 by Friedrich Ernst Dorn (1848-1916) and is considered carcinogenic. Radon is increasingly found in areas with high levels of uranium and thorium in the soil. These are mainly areas with high granitic rock deposits.

  6. Naturally occurring radioactive material - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naturally_occurring...

    Enhanced concentrations of the radium 226 and 228 and the daughter products such as lead-210 may also occur in sludge that accumulates in oilfield pits, tanks and lagoons. Radon gas in the natural gas streams concentrate as NORM in gas processing activities. Radon decays to lead-210, then to bismuth-210, polonium-210 and stabilizes with lead ...

  7. Radon-222 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radon-222

    Radon-222 (222 Rn, Rn-222, historically radium emanation or radon) is the most stable isotope of radon, with a half-life of approximately 3.8 days. It is transient in the decay chain of primordial uranium-238 and is the immediate decay product of radium-226 .

  8. Radium Girls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radium_Girls

    Radium-228 is more likely to cause cancer of the bone as the shorter half-life of radon-220 compared to radon-222 causes the daughter nuclides of radium-228 to deliver a greater dose of alpha radiation to the bones. It also considers the induction of several forms of cancer caused by internal exposure to radium and its daughter nuclides.

  9. Background radiation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Background_radiation

    Some building materials, for example lightweight concrete with alum shale, phosphogypsum and Italian tuff, may emanate radon if they contain radium and are porous to gas. [8] Radiation exposure from radon is indirect. Radon has a short half-life (4 days) and decays into other solid particulate radium-series radioactive nuclides. These ...