.

‘

‘

.

~_

.

“y

i,

4

+

:
cabana, hlaTS ce
a eaten Ba ab tak bd ite, aides ts waa
‘

nuclide

Oo

activity.

ae

Any activity detected ir blark samples represents the

Contamination
and equipment.

con-

.

introduced into the sample by the Laboratory reagents
The average blank walue for each nuclide with its

measure of uncertainty is then subtracted from the sample activity.

1 cubic

The Po-210 activity has been decay corrected for ingrowth from

its Pb-210 parent for the interval between its separation date and the

in

day of collection.

The reported error reflects the uncertainty of

poth the

Po-210 measurements.

anno-

Pb-210 and

RESULTS5§5

An error in the volume computations of ten samples from the April

“he

1AOSteetBAMFN ol EMI ate

a

1969 mission was uncovered.

The corrected radiochemical concentrations

for these ten samples are given in Table 3a.

The radiochemical analy-

ses Of the individual and composite samples from the July 1969 miss.on
are reported in Table 3b.

The gross gamma and Zr-95 concentrations derived from NaI(T1)
gamma spectral analyses of the October 1969 mission are given in

mal

Table 3c.

ci-

its daughter Nb-95 at counting time.

Such spectra reflect the combined photopeaks Gf Zr-95 and
To calculate the quantity of ax??

in this mixture, the production date of the fresh fission product de¥

bris must be known.

The Zr-95 data

in

Table 3c were calculated on

the

assumption that most of the Zr-95 in each of three latitude regions of

It - 13

Select target paragraph3