Various anthropogenic radionuclides and
210Pb were analyzed in a 4.3-m-long core, sampled near the Rhône River mouth in March 1991, to evaluate the extent of industrial
releases that accumulate in this area. The whole core was significantly marked by radionuclide inputs from the nuclear facilities
located along the river (
137Cs,
134Cs,
60Co). Irregular profiles in natural and artificial radionuclides should be related to variations in their respective inputs
from the Rhône River to the Mediterranean Sea. Minimum concentrations were found during high flow periods. Using both the
137Cs/
134Cs profile in the core and the range of this ratio in Rhône waters, mean apparent accumulation rates were estimated to range
between 37 cm yr
−1 and 48 cm yr
−1. This core would then represent a sedimentary record over a 7–10 year period. However, the presence of a signal from the
Chernobyl accident, which occurred on April 26, 1986, was not clearly observed in the core. Inventories of both artificial
and natural radionuclides were greater than expected from atmospheric inputs. The increased sedimentation occurring in close
vicinity to the mouth of the Rhône River is thus responsible for trapping of elements transported by the river to the Mediterranean
Sea. In this area, inventories of artificial radionuclides are well in excess of aerial deposition from Chernobyl and atmospheric
weapons tests and are linked primarily to industrial releases.