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Oak Ridge Reservation: White Oak Creek Radionuclide Releases
Photo from 1991 shows White Oak Lake (lower center).

White Oak Creek Radionuclide Releases

In 1942, the U.S. government established the Oak Ridge Reservation (ORR) in Anderson and Roane Counties in Tennessee. The reservation was part of the Manhattan Project, a government program to research, develop, and produce radioactive materials for nuclear weapons. One of the facilities built at that time was the X-10 site, created to process plutonium. After the end of World War II, the role of the ORR under the Atomic Energy Commission, which subsequently became part of the Department of Energy (DOE), broadened to include a variety of nuclear research and production projects vital to national security.

Beginning in 1943, some contamination from the ORR entered White Oak Creek (located on the reservation) and flowed off the reservation into the Clinch River and Watts Bar Reservoir. Most of the radioactive contamination in the creek came from the X-10 site (known in the past as Clinton Laboratories and now called the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, or ORNL). People living along and using the Clinch River and the Lower Watts Bar Reservoir want to know if their health could be affected by the radionuclide releases. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry (ATSDR) conducted a public health assessment to evaluate whether these radiological releases could be harmful for people who use, or who live near, the Clinch River and the Lower Watts Bar Reservoir.

ATSDR's scientists concluded that some residents living along or visiting the Clinch River and the Lower Watts Bar Reservoir were exposed to radionuclides released from the X-10 site via White Oak Creek. The greatest exposure occurred in the 1950s, and resulted from frequently eating fish caught near Jones Island, close to the mouth of White Oak Creek. The radiation dose from eating fish from the Jones Island area was well below levels associated with a health hazard. Radiation doses were much lower for the other exposure pathways evaluated (drinking water and milk, walking on sediment, and eating meat) and for individuals who caught their fish further downstream. Therefore, ATSDR does not expect adverse health effects to occur from past, current, and future exposure to the surface water, sediment, drinking water, and fish in the Clinch River and Lower Watts Bar Reservoir, and to turtles and geese in the Clinch River.

 Selected Resources

White Oak Creek Radionuclide Releases Technical Summary (PDF, 1 MB)
This fact sheet provides a technical summary of ATSDR's public health assessment evaluating radionuclide releases from White Oak Creek into the Clinch River and the Lower Watts Bar Reservoir.

White Oak Creek Radionuclide Releases Public Health Assessment (8/06) (HTML)
In this public health assessment, ATSDR scientists present their evaluation of potential exposures to White Oak Creek radionuclide releases via the Clinch River and the Lower Watts Bar Reservoir. For a print-friendly version of the public health assessment, download the PDF version.

White Oak Creek Radionuclide Releases - Community Health Concerns
This section of the White Oak Creek radionuclide releases public health assessment presents community health concerns related to topics covered in this public health assessment and ATSDR's responses to them.

X-10 Site Time Line (PDF, 63 KB)
This time line presents the major processes at the X-10 site, ORR environmental monitoring data, and public health activities at the X-10 site.

  Education & Training

Ionizing Radiation Public Health Statement
This is a summary chapter from the toxicological profile for ionizing radiation.

Ionizing Radiation ToxFAQs™
This fact sheet answers the most frequently asked health questions about ionizing radiation.

Ionizing Radiation Toxicological Profile
This ATSDR toxicological profile characterizes the toxicology of ionizing radiation and provides information on adverse health effects associated with exposures to ionizing radiation.

What Is a Public Health Assessment?
This explains that an ATSDR public health assessment reviews available information about hazardous substances at a site and evaluates whether exposures to them could be harmful.

Exposure
This fact sheet answers questions about chemical exposures.

A Citizen's Guide to Risk Assessments and Public Health Assessments at Contaminated Sites
This document provides an overview of two different assessments commonly performed at hazardous waste sites-the risk assessment and the public health assessment. Both are required for all sites listed on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's National Priorities List (also known as "Superfund" sites).

Environmental and Occupational Medical Resources Fact Sheet
This fact sheet lists available medical resources for persons seeking medical assistance for an environment- or occupation-related illness or injury.

 Resources on Oak Ridge Reservation Health Effects
Education & Training Opportunities General Information DOE ORR Annual Site Environmental Reports (ASERs)
Fact Sheets   Questions & Answers   Presentations
         
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This page last updated on August 30, 2006
Questions? - Call the ATSDR Information Center toll free at 1-800-CDC-INFO, or e-mail.

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