-~19- thus be estimated to be 45 millicuries per square mile, about 1.8 times the level in mid-1956. To define the potential risk from a given distribution of Sr-90 on the surface of the earth requires that the distribution be quantitatively related to the skeletal burden of Sr-90 of a human population in dietary equilibrium with the soil from which its nourishment is derived. This equilibrium is already established for a variety of trace elements normally present in the earth's crust. Some of these, like potassium and radium, are radioactive, and this is reflected by the presence of these substances in the human body, For example, the upper foot of soil in the United States contains, on the average, about 1000 millicuries of radiwm per square mile. The averege adult skeleton in this country contains about 10-4 microcuries of radium, which is derived from assimilation of this trace element fran foods end water. Thus, the value of 1074 microcuries of radium represents the amoimt deposited in the skeletons of the populations whose mineral metabolism is in equilibrium with the soil minerals. The freshly deposited Sr-90 takes a relatively long tine to complete the biological route to bone. At the present time the EAR Mt

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