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In 1972 a detailed survey was made of average
annual whole-body doses to the U.S.A. population
from various sources. Occupational and miscellaneous
artificial exposures averaged about 1-2 mR/y
(remember, some people got enough to make up for
the vast majority who got none!); global fallout
from nuclear testing made up about 6 mR/y;
medical exposures (X-rays, radiotherapy, etc.)
were good for nearly 100 mR/y; and natural background
(see below) averaged about 120 mR/y.
The numbers have not changed much in the intervening
years. One must conclude that for the average person
there are only two significant sources of radiation
exposure: medical and natural. Although this begs
the question of "extraordinary cases" who receive
larger exposures in accidents such as Chernobyl,
it still helps to set perspectives for those examples.
Some medical and natural radiation sources are listed below.
For medical examples I have shown the mean dose per exposure.
It is important to note that these are only the
easily measured forms of radiation - X-rays
and -rays - that penetrate flesh (and detectors!)
easily. More insidious and difficult-to-measure types
will be discussed in the next Section.
- Medical X-rays:
Chest, radiographic: 45 mR.
Chest, photofluorographic: 504 mR.
Spinal (per film): 1265 mR.
Dental (average): 1138 mR.11
- Cosmic Rays:
Sea level: 30-40 mR/y.
Colorado: 120 mR/y.
At 40,000 ft: 0.7 mR/h.12
- Natural Terrestrial Radionuclides:
-radiation is fairly uniform in the U.S.A.,
ranging from 30 mR/y in Texas
to 115 mR/y in South Dakota.
Guess where the uranium deposits are!13
Next: The Bad Stuff: Ingested Radionuclides
Up: Radiation Hazards
Previous: Effects
Jess H. Brewer -
Last modified: Mon Nov 23 13:46:57 PST 2015