4 wu) |oindieates a beds burden tn the exposed Rongelap group of 280 mae © by wath an equilibrated bods burden af 430 my Phe Zn level was therefore 89%) ol the estimated ecuithibrium devel in 1954 (see Pable 32) Whole-Body Counting With the Gamma Spectrometer Cesium-137. The body burdens of Gs' ” of the various groups studied during the 1959 surveyare presentcdin Table $$ The variations in levels within each group are quite large [fF Cs' body burden is expressed in units per unit body weight, no significant difference is found between persons older and vounger than [5 vears. The mean Cs' ° level tends to be slightly lower for females than for mates, but again the difference is not signtficant. ft is to be noted that no significant difference was found between the Rongelap exposed. the Ronge- lap unexposed, and the Ailingnae groups. However, the mean Cis'” body burden of the Utirik group (4,3 mpC/ke) istas in the case of Sr“) about one-third that of the Rongelap exposed group (12.0 mpC/ke). The mean Cs'" body burden of the exposed Rongelap group in 1959 was 0.57 aC (12.0 mpeC. ke) compared to 0.68 uC in 1958. The level has fluctuated over the years since the ortginal contaminating event. (See Figure 57, which shows values obtained by whole-body gamma spectrometry and by extrapolation from urinalysis data.) Unlike Sr°’, which ts firmlyfixed in the skeletal tissue, Cs!" has a relatively short biological half- life. and thus readily reflects the environmental os? EXCRETION (uuCeLiTER) 1900 B00 + — rT rT + ~ r 4 4 E00 F 400 -F 7 tb 79 DAYS 100 9 i. 30 L 60 aL 90 Rongelap people after thes returned to their original island in 1997> the body burden in 1958 was about O68 #C. about 60 times as great as in 1957, and the urmnary level rose by a facter of 140, be- cause of the ingestion of Cs! in food on Roneelap during the 9 months since thetr return. The average Cs’) content of 250 Americans studted in 1958 was 6.6 mC or ‘ion of the mean Rongelap bodv burden. ‘The average daily intake of Cs''’ for an inhabit- ant of Rongelap in 1958 (average of [3 daily ratrons) was estimated to be 3.9 mgt.’ This ts about [.3'¢ of the nonindustrial maximum per- mussible daily intake, which is the product of the maximum permissible concentration’ and the datly entake of water: (2«K10 ' pCeml) x (1.5 10' mi /dav) = 300 meC/day . Zinc-65. Z.n”" was first detected by Miller”! in [957 in the seven Marshallese examined at Argonne National Laboratory by whole-body spectrometry, although at had been observed in high concentrations in fish as early as one vear following the 1954 detonation. Bodv burdens of 7n’’ in 1957, measured directly. averaged 44 myG in live Rongelap inhabitants { Figure 57) and 350 mpC intwo Unurik inhabitants. Miller, in 1957, determined an effective half-life of [10 days for the elimination of Zn'*, which gives a bialogical half-life of 200 davs. However, a value of 89 days was obtained for the biological half-life in two patients over a 2-month period.“ The mean body burden of Zn’ estimated from whole-body counting data was 0.36 4G in 1958 after the return of the Rongelap people to their island, or 8 times the 1957 value ( Figure 37). 200 80 level. Vhe sitght increase in environmental level of Gs! during the 1956 and 1958 periods ol weapon lesting was reflected in an inereased bods burden in the Marshallese o\s pointed out. a very marked merease in Cs’ was also observed in the i 1200 4 150 L 180 TIME iN DAYS - SFTER MARCH I 1954 Figure 56. Urinary excretion of Gs!” in exposed Marshallese. The estimated Zn" intake in food (2 to 4 mpC, day) can be largely accounted for bv the Zn” levels reported for fish. [n 1956, fish from Rongelap Lagoon were found to contain 0.6 mpC Zn" per [b muscle, or 7 5 mut: per Ib whole fish.” The 1959 body burdens of Zn"’ are presented tn Table 35. As with Cs'", the variation within any group is large, and no significant differencets found in Zn" per unit body weight correlated

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