months from tide and wave action and
in summer months from ‘tides and the

North Equatorial Current. The surface
movement of waterborne radioactivity
from Bikini and Eniwetok atolls would
therefore

be

westward

toward

the

Philippine Islands, with the possibility

UNCLASSIFIED

of the most radioactive clam kidney
from Eniwetok Atoll in an anticoincidence shielded x-ray counter gave a
positive indication of ®°Ni (at a counting error of 1 S.D.), with an upper
limit of some 0.1

disintegration per

of some movement back toward the

minute per gram of dry weight. No
59Ni was detected in 1000-minute

in the Cromwell Current (73). Both

counts of soil samples obtained from
either atoll. It is probable, therefore,
that no large amounts of 5°Ni were

east in the Equatorial Countercurrent
and possibly eastward at shallow depth

Christmas Island and Penrhyn Atoll lie

in the path of the westward-moving
South Equatorial Current and consequently would be unlikely recipients
of waterborne radioactivity emanating
from Bikini and Eniwetok lagoons.
Nickel-58 comprises some 68 percent
of stable nickel, and we have consid-

ered the possibility of the production

of 5°Ni (half-life, 80,000 years) both

by (n,y) interactions with stable nickel,

(pn) reactions with stable cobalt, and
(p,a@) reactions with “*Fe (92 percent
abundance). Based on abundances,
cross sections, and decay constants, we
calculated an activity ratio of “Ni to
59Ni of approximately 600 for the (n,y)

production of **Ni. Nickel-59 decays

by electron capture and is determined
by measuring the 6.9-kev x-ray which
results from the de-excitation of its
daughter, ®°Co. A 3000-minute count

produced, and that the presence of

small amounts of 5°Ni precludes its

usefulness as a tracer in oceanic processes.
A realistic assessment of the total
®Ni present at Bikini and Eniwetok

atolls is not possible from the data
presented here, although knowledge of
such an inventory and of the rate at
which it is injected into the North

Equatorial Current would help one to
determine its usefulness as a downstream tracer for these waters. However, the giant clam Tridacna sp. ap-

pears to be an excellent indicator organism, which could be used to deline-

ate the downstream penetration of ®Ni.
THOMAS M. BEASLEY
Epwarpb E, HELp
Laboratory ef Radiation Ecology,
University of Washington, Seattle

UNCLASSIFIED

References and Notes
1. F. G. Lowman, in Disposal of Radioactive
Wastes, K. Saddington and W. L. Templeton,
Eds. (Macmillan, New York, 1959), pp.

105-138.

2. G. M. Lederer, J. M. Hollander, I. Perlman,
Table of Isotopes (Wiley, New York, ed. 6,
1967).
3. W. S. Broecker, in The Sea, M. N. Hill, Ed.
(Interscience, New York, 1963), vol. 2,
pp. 88-108.
4. E. D. Goldberg, in The Sea, M. N. Hill, Ed.
(Interscience, New York, 1962), vol. 1, pp.

3-25.

5. R. C. Voter and C, V. Banks, Anal, Chem.

21, 1320 (1949).
6. J. M. Nielsen and T. M. Beasley, in Assess-

ment of Radioactivity in Man (International
Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna, 1964), pp.
245-260.
7. G. D. Nicholls, H. Curl, Jr., V. T. Bowen,
Limnol. Oceanogr. 4, 472 (1959).
8. L. J. Kirby, The Radiochemistry of Nickel
(National
Academy
of
Sciences—National
Research Council Report No. NAS-NS 3051,
Washington, D.C., 1961).
9. T. R. Folson and D. R. Young, Nature 206,

803 (1965).

10. W. C. Hanson, D. G. Watson, R. W. Perkins,
in Radioecological Concentration Processes,
B. Aberg and F. B. Hungate, Eds. (Pergamon Press, Oxford, 1967), pp. 233-245.
11. The concentrations of 5’Co were measured
at the time of collection and are tabulated
in this laboratory.
12, W. S. von Arx, Trans. Amer. Geophys.
Union 29, 861 (1948).
13, J. A. Knaus, in The Sea, M. N. Hill, Ed. (Interscience, New York, 1963), vol. 2, pp. 235-252.
14, We thank Dr. W. Pearcy of Oregon State
University for supplying samples of chaetognaths; Dr. T. R. Folsom of Scripps Institute
of Oceanography and C. H. Fiscus of the
Marine Biological Laboratory, Bureau of
Commercial Fisheries, for supplying squid
specimens. Supported by AEC under contract
No. AT(26-1) -269.
3 March 1969

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