affected by surface conditions. Far example, supposing it exploded over a city or over an agricultural country or something like this. For the time being let's just look at thie and learn what lessons we can fros it. This {s ground sero here, and these lines vhich are dram, are lines of equal radioactivity on the ground vhich were masured a atter of several hours after, or even a day I guees, after the shot bocurred. This is for TUNBLER/SHAPPER Mo. 5. We'll just look at it b: to ehow the typical pattern vhich demonstrates @ large fallout here, m then a secondary fallout at some distance away. This is past the Lincoln mike. Unfortunstely I don t have a scale of miles here, but it s on the order of ten to twonty nites fromthe grow sero, end if you'll correct ma if Ts wrong about this. What's that? Seventy-five miles. §&c: anything very Z should have bad the scale of miles on here. These arrows thet are plotbed here correspond to the hypothetical trajectory which a 100 micron particle vould take it is started from any level and fell following the winds, nd fell at a rate corresponding to Stokes lev. The center would co esppnd to the fall of a 100 micron particle from about 20,000 feet. I mentior that inpeseing, We will Giecuss that in sore detail thisafternoan, Hext abide. WEXLER 3 (first, question about the other maximm). xz : KELLOGG: (117) This other saximus down on the side, to go back, well, presmadly from ancther section of thetloud, another wing structure, Do you vant to comment Jon that one? LULESIAN: | Dr. Wexler, that other mim is that cme percent that we fan;t explain by Stokes lav, and it always eccurred that way; it might be topog aphy, it might ai