-4- It is desirable ta measure the rate of fallout, its accumulation, and the atmaspheric reservoir of material yet to be deposited on earth's surface. The samples currently taken for this program include soils, sea water, collections of fallout in open pots and on gummed film, and collections of atmospheric dust on filters. Soils A soil sample can represent the accumulated fallout at any given location. There are many criteria to bea met to insure. that a soil semple is representative. Anideal sampling site is considered to be an open, level area, undisturbed by cultivation and_cavered by grass or simple vegetation covering to immobilize the surface. Drainage slopes, silted areas or other wmusualdrainageconditions should be avoided. Samples are collected with soilaugers to give definite areas and depths. The most common division of sampling is to.collect the top two inches and the two to six inch layer separately. The known area and the measured weight of sample allow the Sr-90 measurements to be converted to terms of millicuries per square mile. Renoval of Sr-90 from a soil sample is a difficult problen because the relatively low levels of activity currently found reguire use of very large semples. At present two to four pounds of sail are taken for analysis and this makes the usualprocedure of caupletely dissolving the soil by fusion a practical impossibility. Thus although the fusion technique is the only method certain to remove all Sr-90 fram the soil it has been necessary to study other methods for Sr-90 extraction. After considerable experimentstion, procedures that agree satisfactorily with the fusion technique have been developed. Tnese involve the ex- traction of the Sr-90 by electrodialysis or by hydrochloric acid leaching poe é: ARCHIVES 59

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