An iron, chromium, aluminium mixed oxides specimen having the nominal molar composition 0.125 Fe2O3 0.06 Cr2O3/Al2O3 was prepared and subjected to thermal treatment at 700 degrees C. The calcined sample was exposed to different doses of gamma-rays varying between 20 and 160 Mrad. The surface and catalytic properties of the different irradiated solids were studied using nitrogen adsorption at - 196 degrees C and catalysis of CO oxidation by O-2 at 225-300 degrees C. The results showed that gamma-irradiation at doses between 20 and 80 Mrad resulted in a progressive increase of specific surface area (10-36%), total pore Volume (55-175%) and mean pore radius (41-105%) of treated adsorbents. Irradiation at doses above this limit led to a significant decrease in the magnitudes of different surface parameters which still measured higher values than those found for the un-irradiated sample. The catalytic activity increased monotonically as a function of the dose absorbed. The catalytic reaction rate constant, measured at 225, 250 and 300 degrees C increased by 400, 170 and 115%, respectively by exposure to a dose of 160 Mrad. The increase in the reaction rate constant per unit surface area measured at the same reaction temperatures due gamma-irradiation at 160 Mrad was 370, 155 and 102%. This treatment did not modify the mechanism of the catalytic reaction, but increased the number of catalytically active sites taking part in chemisorption and catalysis of CO oxidation reaction without changing their energetic nature. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.