Stu21 said:
So your saying there are two types of radioactivity;
the decay of atoms, or the weak nuclear force emitting radioactive particles such as beta particles,
and radionuclides which are unstable isotopes that are remnants of nuclear explosions such as chernobyl
No - I am saying there are several ways that radiation can be produced.
Nuclear Radiation is as umbrella terms for all the bits that fly off a disintegrating nucleus. The bit left behind is called the "daughter".
Radiation, in general, can be matter, antimatter, or light, and does not have to be created by a nuclear disintegration. The matter and antimatter may be charged or uncharged. So - sunlight is radiation, so is the light from an incandescent bulb.
Radiation from a nucleus may occur by strong or weak nuclear processes or by electromagnetic de-excitation. These commonly produce alpha, or beta particles, and light (and neutrinos, ejected nucleons etc).
In the case of the ground water in Texas, would it be that the radium-salt is a radionuclide of Radium. It is highly radioactive meaning it decays quickly releasing lots of radioactive particles into the water contaminating everything else?
"Contamination" is not a good description for what radiation does. Treat it as one of those cases where the journalists don't get it.
Something not normally radioactive can become contaminated by radioactive materials either by the materials themselves being introduced into it from outside or by radiation transmuting otherwise stable nuclei into unstable ones. The first kind is the most common. Bear in mind that radioactive materials occur naturally and a certain percentage even of our own bodies is naturally radioactive because of this.
In relation to your question: the contaminant is radium chloride (or bromide?[1]). Radium is radioactive - so things contaminated with radium will set off a geiger counter. It is common for the press to mistakenly report this as contamination by radiation. The radiation from radium is not able to transmute common elements.
Note: apart from radioactivity, radium salts are also poisonous.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radium#Radioactivity
http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/substances/toxsubstance.asp?toxid=154
[1] Radium chloride is toxic, don't know about bromide. There's also nitrate and hydroxide ... so I could be assuming too much here.