Abstract
This study aims to investigate the radioactivity of adobe in Angola, where it is a widely used building material. Sixty samples have been collected from three remote areas of the country with different geological backgrounds (Cabinda, Huambo, Menongue). Activity concentrations of 226Ra, 232Th and 40K have been determined by gamma-ray spectroscopy and radiation hazard indices were also calculated. The area Huambo shows elevated 226Ra and 232Th values which can be explained by its older geological formations. 40K concentrations are low in general. Regarding external radiation risk, adobe from Angola is safe to use as building material.
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Introduction
Radiation exposure originates mainly from natural sources [1]. Human population is exposed to two types of natural radiation: (1) internal exposure is due to inhalation or ingestion of radionuclides which release alpha, beta and gamma radiation inside the human body, (2) external exposure is mostly due to the more penetrable gamma radiation from surrounding environment. Amongst natural sources contributing to external exposures, terrestrial radionuclides and cosmic radiation are the biggest contributors [1, 2]. Building materials also significantly contribute to the exposure of the population to natural radioactivity [3] as they contain terrestrial radionuclides. The main radionuclides responsible for terrestrial radiation are the members of the 238U and 232Th series together with 40K [1, 2]. From radiological point of view the relatively long half-life (1640 years) and the widespread abundance in the environment make 226Ra and its decay products the most important isotopes in the 238U decay chain. Therefore, concentrations of these radionuclides significantly affect the radiation exposure of the population, which varies from place to place depending mostly on the geology of the studied areas.
Many investigations on natural radioactivity of building materials have been carried out worldwide. These studies contributed to the elaboration of regulations applicable nationally or regionally [2, 4,5,6,7]. In Africa, only a few countries followed the path of detailed investigation of natural radioactivity. Reviewing studies made in Africa, highly different results can be found depending on the focus of the research. For example, taking as reference the worldwide median of UNSCEAR [7], activity concentrations of primordial radionuclides in soil are in the range of the reference in Zambian building materials from Lusaka [8], but higher in Namibian soils [9]. In terms of dose, in Cameroon, an investigation on rocks and soils for outdoor effective dose rates showed variable results depending on the geology of the studied area, reaching values three to four times higher than the recommended limit of 0.07 mSv year−1 by the UNSCEAR [10, 11]. In Kenya, studies have also shown annual effective doses higher than the reference in certain areas [12, 13].
As seen above, natural radiation in Africa varies considerably depending on the location. In Angola, there is no record of studies on natural radiation. Adobe is one of the most used building materials both in villages and suburban areas, and it is the most widespread building material of families with low income. It is easily accessible, and it has an advantage of keeping a favorable indoor temperature in tropical climate. In this work, the studied building material is adobe and the focus of the study is the contribution of this building material to external radiation exposure. Adobes are made of soil and water, sometimes mixed with organic matter, and dried at ambient conditions. Because of the simple manufacturing of adobes, they preserve the radionuclide content of the source soil. It is important to note that soil composition is determined by the geological composition of the mother rock.
This study aims to determine the activity concentrations of 226Ra, 232Th and 40K in Angolan adobe, and evaluate the risk of external exposure of the population living in adobe houses. Another aim is to classify the building materials by using international indexes like the radium equivalent index (Raeq) and the activity concentration index (I). Taking into account local differences on the background radiation, gamma dose rates measured in situ and those calculated from the activity concentrations of the radionuclides, found in the building materials, are compared. Being the first such research done in Angola, it will contribute to the Angolan and African natural radioactivity database, serving as reference for further studies.
Studied areas
Angola is the sixth biggest African country with a 1,246,700 km2 area. The western part of the country is surrounded by the Atlantic Ocean along a 1650 km long coastline. The geographical landscape of the country varies from north to south as follows; a tropical forest at the north part, a fine coastal line along the ocean, an interior plateau in the center, and a dry savannah from south to south east.
Three different areas were chosen for this study based on their different geographical position and geological background. These are Cabinda at the north, Huambo in the central part and Menongue more towards the south (Fig. 1). These three localities belong to three different provinces. Below an overview of each province is provided. The information summarized is mostly from “Notícia Explicativa da Carta Geologica de Angola”, a summary of the geology of Angola made by the National Institute of Geology in 1977, which was reviewed and updated in 1992 [14]. It is important to note that the reconstitution of the Angolan Geological map is still ongoing.
Cabinda
In Angola most of the main cities have the same name as the province they belong to. This is the case of Cabinda which is the main city of the Cabinda province. It is located at 12° 12′ E and 5° 30′ S with a mean altitude of 1 m above sea level (Fig. 1). The province of Cabinda is an enclave located at the North-West part of the country. Its climate is tropical humid.
The geology of the province is characterized by various formations aging from Precambrian to Holocene, including Pleistocene marine deposits at the coastal area.
Huambo
Huambo is the capital city of the Huambo province. It is located 1700 m above the sea and the coordinates are 15° 45′ E and 12° 48′ S (Fig. 1). The province of Huambo is located at the central part of the country. Its climate is tropical highly influenced by the altitude and the cold current of Benguela.
The geology of the province consists of old (Archean to Proterozoic) metamorphic (gneiss, micaschist, metasediments) and igneous (granite, rhyolite to andesites) rocks. At Huambo city Paleocene-Eocene laterites were also mapped.
Menongue
Menongue is the main city of the Cuando Cubango province. It is located at 17° 41′ E and 14° 39′ S with an elevation of 1300 m above sea level (Fig. 1). The province of Cuando Cubango is located at the south west part of the country. Its climate is semi-desert influenced by the desert of Namibe.
Its geology is based on Archean mostly gneiss and Proterozoic rhyolite-andesite and Tertiary–Quaternary Kalahari sediment formations.
Materials and methods
In-situ ambient gamma dose rate
The portable device FH 40 G-L10 (Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.) was used to perform the in situ ambient gamma dose equivalent rate measurements. The detection limit of the mentioned survey meter goes from 10 nSvh−1 to 100 mSvh−1 and from 30 keV to 4.4 MeV regarding the gamma energies. Measurements were done in the living rooms of 45 houses at two or three different points, at 1 m height.
Building material sampling
A total of 60 adobe samples were collected in the three study areas, making 20 per area. The materials were sampled from (i) pieces of remaining adobes after construction, (ii) pieces took directly from houses, and (iii) soil used to make the adobe, in a few cases. The sampling sites were selected randomly within the studied cities (Fig. 1).
Sample preparation
The sample preparation was carried out in the Lithosphere Fluid Research Lab at the Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest. Samples were dried at lab temperature (around 20 °C) at least for a month. Then they were powdered and sieved below 0.5 mm diameter to ensure homogeneity. Afterwards the homogeneous samples were dried in an oven at 40 °C until constant weight is reached.
The dry, homogeneous samples were poured into sample holders made of High-Density Polyethylene (HDPe) which are proven to be radon-tight [15]. There was a need to artificially compact the sample in the sample holder in order to avoid a later self-compaction, because it could have led to an empty space inside the sample holder where 222Rn can accumulate. Such inhomogeneity leads to false results [15]. After the filling, samples were left on rest for a minimum of 30 days to ensure the secular equilibrium between 226Ra, 222Rn and its daughters.
Gamma-ray spectroscopy
Gamma-ray spectroscopy measurements were carried out at the Centre for Energy Research, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest. An n-type HPGe detector (Canberra GR1319) with a relative efficiency of 13%, and a Canberra DSA-2000 acquisition system were used with a low background chamber [15]. The energy resolution (FWHM) is 1.53 and 1.99 keV at 662 and 1332 keV, respectively. The peak-to-Compton ratio is 42.8:1 at 1332 keV. Dead-time losses during the experiments never exceeded 0.05%. The efficiency transfer method was applied for the determination of the full-energy-peak efficiency for the extended samples in close-in geometry. More details on the measurement method are explained by Kis et al. [15].
Samples were measured for 42–120 h (samples with lower radioactivity needed more time) to reach good statistics. The determination of 226Ra was made from gamma lines of 222Rn daughters, 214Pb (242, 295 and 352 keV) and 214Bi (609, 1120 and 1765 keV), assuming the secular equilibrium inside the sample holder. 232Th was evaluated using gamma lines of 212Pb (239 and 300 keV) and 228Ac (338, 463, 911, 965 and 969 keV) assuming the secular equilibrium in the 232Th chain as well. K-40 was evaluated from its own peak (1461 keV).
Hazard indexes calculations
For the qualification and classification of building materials, hazard indexes were determined from the activity concentrations of 226Ra (C226Ra), 232Th (C232Th) and 40K (C232Th).
Radium equivalent index (Raeq)
Radium equivalent index (Raeq in Bq kg−1) is one of the most commonly used indexes in literature. This index allows to calculate the specific activity concentration of the sample and to evaluate the radiation hazard associated to it. The equation below (Eq. 1) determining the Raeq index is established considering that 370 Bq kg−1 of 226Ra, 299 Bq kg−1 of 232Th and 4810 Bq kg−1 of 40K produce the same gamma dose rate. Limit values of Raeq are the following: for building materials 370 Bq kg−1 [16] to keep the external dose below 1.5 mSv year−1, for industrial use 740 Bq kg−1, for roads and railways 2200 Bq kg−1, for landfill materials 3700 Bq kg−1.
Activity concentration index I
The unitless activity concentration index (I, Eq. 2) recommended by the Radiation Protection (RP)112 [17], was applied for further comparison purposes. Calculation of this index is based on the following assumptions: the room size is 4 m × 5 m × 2.8 m, all structures (walls, floor and ceiling) are made of the same material with density of 2350 kg m−3, no windows or doors exist, and it also takes into account a background cosmic and terrestrial dose rate of 50 nG year h−1 [17]. The main aim of this index is to show whether the annual dose due to the excess external gamma radiation in a building may exceed 1 mSv year−1 [17]. For materials used in bulk amounts the recommended limit of this index is I ≤ 1, whilst for materials with restricted usage it is I ≤ 6.
Dose estimations
In this work annual effective doses (AED) were determined in two distinct ways: in the first method it was determined from the in situ ambient gamma dose equivalent rate measurements (AED-measured) and in the other it was calculated from the activity concentrations of 226Ra, 232Th and 40K of the building material (AED-calculated).
In-situ ambient gamma dose equivalent rate measurements (AED-measured)
The AED-measured was determined by converting the ambient gamma dose equivalent rate values measured in situ from nSv h−1 to mSv year−1.
Calculated annual effective dose (AED-calculated)
The AED-calculated (De in mSv year−1; Eq. 3) was determined from the absorbed dose rate (Da in nG year h−1) taking into account the annual indoor occupancy time (T = 0.8 × 24 h × 365.25 d = 7012.8 h year−1) and the dose conversion factor (F = 0.7 SvG year−1) [17]. According to the RP 112 [17], Da can be calculated from the equation below (Eq. 4) if we consider a room with dimensions of 4 m × 5 m x 2.8 m, wall thickness of 20 cm and wall density of 2350 kg m−3. A 50 nG year h−1 background radiation is assumed.
Statistics
Descriptive statistics as mean, average and standard deviation have been determined using the software program “Origin”. The data also have been summarized in box and whisker plots for a comparison of the results obtained at different studied locations.
Pearson correlation coefficients [18] have been determined for the variables using the software program “Statgraphics”. All the statistical tests were performed at the 95% confidence level, in this program.
Results
Measured 226Ra, 232Th and 40K activity concentrations
Average and standard deviations of the activity concentrations in Bq kg−1 are 26 ± 7, 36 ± 5, 45 ± 17 in Cabinda, 87 ± 20, 81 ± 21, 82 ± 15 in Huambo and 27 ± 10, 30 ± 10, 73 ± 40 in Menongue for 226Ra, 232Th and 40K, respectively (Table 1; Fig. 2a–c).
Correlations among 226Ra, 232Th and 40K activity concentrations
Correlations between 226Ra and 232Th was found to be 0.66 in Cabinda with a P value of 0.0014 (Table 2; Fig. 3a), 0.55 in Huambo with a P-value of 0.012 (Table 2; Fig. 3b) and 0.80 in Menongue with a P-value of 0.0001 (Table 2; Fig. 3c). According to this result, in all areas the mentioned radionuclides have a statistically significant relationship.
Correlations between 226Ra and 40K show the following results: 0.62 with a P-value of 0.0036 in Cabinda (Table 2; Fig. 4a), 0.19 with a P-value of 0.41 in Huambo (Table 2; Fig. 4b) and 0.23 with a P-value of 0.338 in Menongue (Table 2; Fig. 4c). Statistically significant relationship is found in Cabinda, but not in the two other areas.
Results of correlations between 232Th and 40K are as follows: 0.36 with a P-value of 0.115 in Cabinda (Table 2; Fig. 5a), 0.50 with a P-value of 0.023 in Huambo (Table 2; Fig. 5b) and 0.48 with a P-value of 0.0312 in Menongue (Table 2; Fig. 5c). Here we have statistically significant relationship in Huambo and Menongue, but not in Cabinda.
Raeq and I hazard indexes
Averages and standard deviations of the Raeq index are 81 ± 13 Bq kg−1 in Cabinda, 209 ± 45 Bq kg−1 in Huambo and 76 ± 24 Bq kg−1 in Menongue. For the I index, averages and standard deviations are 0.28 ± 0.05 in Cabinda, 0.72 ± 0.15 in Huambo and 0.26 ± 0.08 in Menongue (Table 1; Fig. 6a, b).
Doses
Measured in situ ambient gamma dose equivalent rates present the following averages and respective standard deviations: 0.6 ± 0.13, 1.5 ± 0.32 and 1.04 ± 0.16 mSv year−1 in Cabinda, Huambo and Menongue, respectively (Table 1; Fig. 7). Averages of the annual doses calculated from the activity concentration of the radionuclides in building materials with respective standard deviation are: 0.4 ± 0.06, 0.8 ± 0.2 and 0.3 ± 0.06 mSv year−1 in Cabinda, Huambo and Menongue, respectively (Table 1; Fig. 7).
Discussion
Influence of geology on natural radiation in Angola
The influence of geology on the spatial distribution of natural radiation has been proven by many studies [19,20,21,22]. Different gamma dose values can relate to different geological backgrounds [23,24,25]. It is important to recall that the studied building material (i.e., adobe) is made of the local soil, which develops via weathering process from the surrounded rocks. The composition of the source rock eventually controls the natural radioactivity of the soils of the area [26] and therefore of adobes. Results of present study have shown different levels of radioactivity at the three studied areas of Angola that have different geological backgrounds [14]. As seen in the results, the North part (Cabinda) and the South part (Menongue) show the lowest average activity concentrations: 26 ± 7, 36 ± 5, 45 ± 17 and 27 ± 10, 30 ± 10, 73 ± 40 for 226Ra, 232Th and 40K, respectively. Adobe samples collected in Cabinda are mostly made of soils derived from rocks belonging to Pleistocene marine sediment formations consisting mostly of sand deposits. Adobe samples from Menongue are from soils formed from rocks belonging to Eocene-Pliocene sand formations. In contrary, the central part of the country (Huambo) with Archean metamorphic (gneiss and micaschist) and Proterozoic metasediment formations shows the highest average activity concentrations (Fig. 2a–c; [14]). The above described formations are known for their potential to contain elevated concentrations of radioactive minerals [27].
Geochemistry of the studied radionuclides
In order to understand the mutual effects of the three studied radionuclides, 226Ra, 232Th and 40K, it is important to analyze their correlations and consequently, their relationships. The strongest correlation between 226Ra and 232Th is found in Menongue (R = 0.8, Fig. 3c). The lithology made up of Eocene–Pliocene sediment formations in Menongue is rather homogeneous [14]. In areas with such a characterization, correlations between 226Ra and 232Th are expected to be high [28]. This strong correlation, found between 226Ra and 232Th, may be explained by the similar geochemical behavior of the parent and progeny nuclides, which infers similar responses to the soil and environmental processes that affect their distribution [26]. Uranium and thorium have the same replacement capacity of a nucleus in the lattice of a mineral because of their radius length. Moreover, despite the fact that uranium tend to be more mobile than thorium during weathering processes, studies have proven the immobility of uranium due to adsorption or co-precipitation by amorphous Fe-oxyhydroxides [27]. Therefore, Dequincey et al. [29] had the same result of uranium and thorium accumulation in the indurated ferruginous cap of African laterites, and of their secondary redistribution into the profile.
Regarding the correlation between 226Ra and 40K, the only area with a statistically significant relationship is Cabinda (Fig. 4). Samples from Cabinda were taken at the littoral part where chemical weathering is not profound, whereas, in the interior part of the country (Huambo, Menongue) not only the rocks but the soils are highly weathered [30, 31]. Both studies by Wilford et al. [32] and Dickson and Scott [33] explain the influence of the weathering process and the topography on the radionuclide distribution [34]. Potassium is more easily weathered and leached out than radium in soils because of its higher solubility and probably hygroscopic feature. Moreover, upper horizons in soils are poor in potassium because of the plant uptake [35].
Contrariwise, to the results from the correlation between 226Ra and 40K, statistically significant relationship exists between 232Th and 40K in Huambo and Menongue but not in Cabinda (Fig. 5). In some cases for instance when thorium is hydrated [27], the behavior of potassium and thorium is similar during the weathering process. In these cases, both elements are mobile during the weathering process as demonstrated on the study of Dickson and Scott [33]. Consequently, the average potassium and thorium content of soils reflect the average of the rocks content on the same elements from which they are derived. However, the differences in soil radioelement concentrations are relatively small [34].
Overall, the correlation among radionuclides is the strongest between 226Ra and 232Th in all areas which was also found in adobes and soils, for instance, by Szabó et al. [36] and El Afifi et al. [37]. However, as extensively demonstrated by Wilford et al. [32], in the study about different Australian soils, weathering processes and topography might have a big influence on the behavior of the radionuclides, consequently their distribution in the soil.
Measured, calculated and estimated levels in this study
Activity compared to worldwide levels and to other countries with similar studies
Because in Angola there are no studies about radiation of building materials, it was more adequate to compare the results of our study to similar materials in other countries (Table 3). In that regard, apart from adobe, we used soil, red-soil bricks, mud-bricks, soil and clay bricks because the conservation of the radionuclides content is similar considering that the manufacturing process does not change the initial composition of the building material [36]. It is also important to note that studies related to the radiological assessment of the adobe building materials are scarce. The worldwide median concentrations in soils (35, 30 and 400 Bq kg−1 for 226Ra, 232Th and 40K, respectively) determined by UNSCEAR [7] will be used as reference values.
Amongst all the studied radionuclides, highest average values are found in Huambo, at the central part of the country (Fig. 2a–c). Measured activity concentrations of 226Ra and 232Th are lower in Cabinda (26 ± 7, 36 ± 5 Bq kg−1) and Menongue (27 ± 10, 30 ± 10 Bq kg−1) but more than two times higher in Huambo (87 ± 20, 81 ± 21 Bq kg−1) than the reference values (30, 40 Bq kg−1, [7], Fig. 2a, b). Regarding 40K, all measured samples are below the reference ([7], Table 3).
Activity concentrations in this study are also comparable to those found in different studies from other countries as seen in Table 3. Average values of 226Ra in Cabinda and Menongue are the same within standard deviation as Hungarian adobe [36], Australian mud-bricks [38], Bangladesh and Egyptian red clay bricks [39, 40], as well as Cameroonian and Spain soils [26, 41], whereas in Huambo they are higher. If the average is considered for all samples together (47 ± 30 Bq kg−1), the value is higher than the world reference value (Table 3) raising the attention to a potential radiation risk if pore structure is advantageous for radon and thoron exhalation [42, 43]. This is the topic of another paper in preparation of the authors.
Regarding the values of 232Th in Table 3, Huambo (central) belongs to the group with highest averages (above 81 Bq kg−1). Cabinda and Menongue values are in the same range as those from most of the countries but lower than the world reference value. The average of all samples together (49 ± 26 Bq kg−1) is slightly higher than the reference value [7].
All activity concentrations of 40K from present study are much lower compared to most values contained in Table 3. The distribution of 40K can be highly variable because it can be controlled by physical processes such as soil redistribution (erosion/deposition) and by processes of leaching/sorption in the soil complex [26, 32, 33]. These reveal significance of geology, local climatic conditions and physical processes which are crucial to the radionuclide distribution.
Indexes compared to international and recommended limits
Values of the Radium Equivalent Index, Raeq, are higher at the central part of the country (Huambo) and lower at the south part of the country (Menongue). None of the results is higher than the recommended value of 370 Bq kg−1 [16].
Values of Raeq from the present study are compared to other countries as seen in Table 3. Values of the adobe from the central part (Huambo) are higher (209 Bq kg-−1; Fig. 6a) than most chosen reference countries, being only lower than the clay bricks from Finland (241 Bq kg−1; [16]) and those from Australia (218 Bq kg−1; [38]).
As for the I index, results from this study show average values three times higher in Huambo (0.72) than both other studied areas (Cabinda, 0.28 and Menongue, 0.26; Fig. 6b). All calculated values are lower than the recommended limit of 1. However, some maxima values from Huambo (0.95, 0.94) are very close to the recommended limit (Fig. 6b). Comparing to other studies as shown in Table 3, averages from the central part, Huambo, are just lower than the red clay bricks from Bangladesh (0.91; [39]) and higher than all others, whereas, from Cabinda (0.28) and Menongue (0.26) the averages are lower compared to all other studies (Table 3, Fig. 6b). If we consider the average of the I index for all samples (0.42), the value is higher than that of Hungarian adobes (0.35) and Nigerian soils (0.33) [44, 45], but lower than values found in other studies (Table 3, Fig. 6b).
Measured and estimated effective doses
The annual effective dose was determined according to two different procedures (Methods Section (f).). In one hand, it is calculated from the radionuclides activity concentration of the building material and the other hand, it is the result of an in situ measurement.
All the results of the estimated dose calculated from the radionuclides activity concentration of the building material are lower than the recommended limit of 1 mSv year−1 [7] (Fig. 7). However, results from the direct gamma dose rate measurement indicates that values measured in Huambo (1.5 mSv year−1; central part) and Menongue (1.04 mSv year−1; south part) are higher than 1 mSv year−1 (Fig. 7).
In all cases measured values are higher than calculated ones by a ratio of 1.8, 1.9 and 3.9 in Cabinda (north), Huambo (central) and Menongue (south), respectively (Fig. 7). This indicates the influence of other sources than the building material, namely that of the cosmic rays and radionuclides from the soil [23, 46].
In other hand, if we compare AED-calculated results from Cabinda (north) and Menongue (south), we will find slightly higher values in the north (0.4 mSv year−1 in Cabinda versus 0.3 mSv year−1 in Menongue) but if we compare AED-measured results for the same areas, the north presents much higher values (0.6 in Cabinda versus 1.04 mSv year−1 in Menongue). The main difference between the areas is the altitude (1 m in Cabinda, 1354 m in Menongue). This is similar to the results of Achola et al. [12] who found very different ratios between the directly measured values and those calculated from radionuclide concentrations varying generally from 1.3 to 7.3, and up to 45.5 in one particular case. Furthermore, it has also been demonstrated and confirmed by studies made in different parts of the world that dose exposure highly depends on the altitude [6].
Conclusion
From the three studied areas in Angola two, Cabinda (north) and Menongue (south) show 226Ra and 232Th activity concentrations in adobe building material in the same range as most international works focusing on similar type of materials. Whereas, Huambo (central) shows elevated values (116–49 and 121–39 Bq kg−1 for 226Ra and 232Th respectively). Regarding 40K, values from all studied areas are low compared to other countries. From the correlations among the studied radionuclides, one may conclude that their geochemical behavior is an important factor determining their abundance. Based on the determined Raeq and I building material qualification indexes, adobe building material from Angola is safe to use in radiological point of view. However, a closer look at the geology of the source material is strongly recommended when old metamorphic and igneous rocks, and their mechanical fragments are present. The annual effective doses showed different ranges for different methods of determination. Values determined from direct measurements are higher than those estimated from the activity concentrations of the building materials. It is because not only the geology influences the external radiation dose of the population living in adobe houses, but also the altitude of the settlement.
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Acknowledgements
Open access funding provided by Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE). This project is financed by the Higher Education Department of the Angolan Army (FAA). J. Salupeto-Dembo is thankful for the support of all the members of the Lithosphere Fluid Research Lab of the University Eötvös Loránd University. The work of Zs. Szabó-Krausz is funded by the Premium Postdoctorate Research Program of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. A big thanks to all the colleagues connected to this project from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Nuclear Security Department, Centre for Energy Research, especially to K.Zs. Szabó. Our thanks are extended to people in Angola who made possible the field campaign: Regue, Agostinho, Adelaide, Lelo, Mestre, Bruno, Bemba, Nangueve, Tio Bino, Sr Sapundo, Sr David, Fifi, and all the local people for their trust. We couldn’t forget the special help from Mr. António Dembo and Mrs. Lizeth Pena. The authors are thankful for the work of the reviewer(s) and the editor. This is the 96th publication of the Lithosphere Fluid Research Laboratory (LRG), Eötvös University.
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Salupeto-Dembo, J., Szabó-Krausz, Z., Völgyesi, P. et al. External radiation exposure of the Angolan population living in adobe houses. J Radioanal Nucl Chem 323, 353–364 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10967-019-06920-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10967-019-06920-z