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The Loch Lomond Natural
Analogue is useful because of the unusual evolution of the loch over the
last ten thousand years or so.
The loch has been found to have a clay bed consisting of a sediment layer
of marine origin sandwiched by freshwater sediment layers.
It was assumed that the freshwater and marine sediment layers would differ
in chemistry and mineralogy, this hypothesis was proven to be correct.
Since repository designs often have layers of clay as protective barriers
around the waste canisters, it is therefore of the utmost importance to
determine radionuclide movement in the permeable clay.

Loch Lomond, Scotland
The Loch Lomond study
provided evidence that the natural elements analagous to radionuclides
contained in the marine sediment layer have moved very little over more
than five thousand years.
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