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The MIA has called upon several of the country's
leading scientists in geology and geochemistry to assist in
preparing a response to the allegations in this article that
radon gas emissions from granite countertops may be hazardous.
On reading the article, our consultants reacted with such
comments as "ludicrous", "a fabulous collage of nonsense",
"politically motivated", "unethical", and "bizarre".
Donald Langmuir, PhD, Professor Emeritus of
Chemistry and Geochemistry at the Colorado School of Mines and
President of Hydrochemical Systems Corp., both in Golden,
Colorado, has prepared a
response
on behalf of the Marble Institute of America that
evaluates and refutes these allegations.
His report
appears in full in this Special Bulletin. Dr.
Langmuir received his BA (with honors), and his MA and PhD
degrees in geochemistry from Harvard University. He served as a
geochemist with the Ground Water Branch of the U.S. Geological
Survey's Water Resources Division and subsequently taught and
conducted research for 11 years at Pennsylvania State
University, with temporary appointments at Rutgers University,
the Nevada Desert Research Institute, and the University of
Sidney, Australia. Dr. Langmuir has been a full professor at the
Colorado School of Mines since 1978.
In addition to working with Dr. Langmuir and
other scientists, the MIA staff also talked with the major U.S.
granite quarriers and producers about the issue of radon
emissions from granite. These companies have certainly not
ignored the issue and several have had radon testing performed
on their granites. The research done for these companies have
shown that actual levels of radon gas emissions from granites
are so low as to be insignificant and generally represent no
threat to the health and well-being of people who live or work
in buildings with granite countertops, floor or wall tiles,
furniture or any other furnishings made from granite.
Marbles, limestone and stones other than granites
are of such mineral composition that they generally do not
contain measurable quantities of radon-producing material. In
terms of building materials, radon emissions from concrete,
cement and gypsum could be of greater concern.
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What is Radon?
Radon is a naturally occurring
gas generated by the decay of trace amounts of
uranium found in the earth's crust throughout
the world. It is an unstable gas that quickly
breaks down and dissipates in the air.
Radon is measured in units called
picocuries per liter (pCi/L). A picocurie is one
trillionth (10 -12) of a curie, which is the
amount of radioactivity emitted by a gram of
radium. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) has established 4 pCi/L as the standard
for indoor air; 20 pCi/L represents the maximum
amount of exposure to radium that is now allowed
by U.S. regulations. |
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The following is Dr. Langmuir’s report:
Date: September 1, 1995
To: Marble Institute of America
From: Donald Langmuir, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Geochemistry,
Colorado School of Mines, & President, Hydrochem Systems Corp.
Subject: The article 'Granite and Radon' published in Solid
Surface
I
am appalled and dismayed that any journal would accept a
pseudo-science article such as this for publication. If this
article had been submitted to a reputable scientific journal,
the editors and reviewers would have demanded that the author
supply scientific evidence to support his/her many unfounded and
unsupported assertions and conclusions. Lacking such evidence
they would have rejected it for publication. As a separate
point, I am very suspicious of a paper that has no named author.
Who is responsible for this attack on granite countertops? Is it
someone who stands to benefit economically?
Two of the scientific experts who the author (or authors?) cites
repeatedly in the bibliography as sources of the arguments have
become aware of the 'Granite and Radon' paper. They agree with
me that the author's conclusion that a granite countertop could
emit a high and dangerous concentration of radon to a home is
both totally fallacious and ludicrous. In fact, as you will see
below, the amount of radon released from a typical granite
countertop is certain to be completely negligible and well below
detection by any known method of radioactive analysis. I would
be delighted to have a granite countertop in my home!
As
to my credentials to evaluate and refute 'Granite and Radon', I
have been conducting funded university research and publishing
in peer reviewed journals on the geochemistry of radioactive
elements for nearly 20 years at Penn State University and the
Colorado School of Mines. In recognition of this expertise, I
was nominated by the National Academy of Sciences and appointed
to serve as a member of the U.S. Nuclear Waste Technical Review
Board by President Reagan in 1989, and reappointed to that
position for a second four-year term by President Bush in 1992.
It
is worth noting that the stone industry, whether advertising
countertops, building materials or monuments, terms many stones
'granites' that are not true granites to a geologist. A true
granite, which is often grey or pink, is chiefly comprised of a
potassium aluminum silicate mineral (K-feldspar or potassium
feldspar) and quartz (silica or SiO2). Rocks called granites by
the industry also include magnesium silicates (e.g. peridotites
and serpentines) and a host of other chemically different
rock-types, most of which contain much less uranium than does
true granite.
As
admitted by the author of 'Granite and Radon', there have been
no direct measurements of radon release from granite
countertops. Model calculations suggested by Dr. Richard Wanty,
using a standard, scientifically accepted approach and
conservative assumptions, indicate that the radon release from a
granite countertop is orders of magnitude below detection by any
known analytical method. Incidentally, Dr. Wanty, who is a
geochemist with the U.S. Geological Survey, co-authored or
co-edited four of the expert references cited in the author's
bibliography. He has performed research and published on the
geochemistry of radioactive elements for sixteen years, and
studied radon as apublic health issue since 1986. Dr. Wanty's
worksheet reproduced below may be used to calculate the
concentration of radon that would be released from a granite
countertop. The worksheet is shown with an example calculation,
assuming a ten-foot by seven-foot granite countertop.
The EPA standard, which is not to be exceeded in indoor air, is
4 picoCuries per liter of air (4 pCi/L). Eisenbud 1 indicates
that the average contributions of radon from various sources to
indoor air are 1.5 pCi/L from the soil (under and around the
house), 0.01 pCi/L from public water supplies (0.4 pCi/L) from
private wells), 0.05 pCi/L from building materials, and 0.2 pCi/L
from outdoor air. These values are for the average house which
is ventilated such that over one hour the air is changed 0.5 to
1.5 times. The vanishingly small amount of radon in household
air that might be released from a granite countertop (0.00000074
pCi/L) as computed below, has been calculated assuming no
exchange of indoor and outdoor air, which would further
trivialize its significance. Note also that the radon content of
outside air is 270,000 times greater than that released by the
countertop.
There are certain properties of rocks that can increase their
radon emanation efficiency, or in other words increase the
release of radon from a given weight of rock. These are rock
properties that maximize the exposure of internal or external
rock surfaces to water or air, allowing any radon gas to escape.
The author of 'Granite and Radon' argues that such properties,
which include rock porosity, fissuring and mylonitization, will
increase radon releases. This is probably true, however, a
granite with such properties would be too brittle to make into a
countertop, and too open to take a polish, and so would not be
marketable as a countertop - unless the rock pores were first
filled with a chemical sealant. Such sealing would also
eliminate any possible radon release problems.
In summary, to show how laughable are the
concerns expressed in 'Granite and Radon', the typical
granite countertop in our example will release 7.4 x 10 -7
pCi/L of air. This corresponds to 2.7 x 10 -8 atom decays
per second (dps). This represents 0.85 decays per year. In
other words, less than one atom of radon is produced by the
countertop in one year. This is hardly worth getting excited
about. I would suggest that a good way to reduce our
exposure to the radon present in outdoor air, would be to
build an air-tight house out of granite countertops!
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