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being returnedto these islands. It became apparent that a special vessel was needed, and in 1973
the AEC arranged for the Army to provide an

ward thedistrict centers, and the “homeislands”

at Kwajalein (with AEC funding). This vessel,
though small andslow,has the distinct advantage
that it can be beached,so that ship-to-shore transfer of equipment and personnel by small boatis
unnecessary. Three 30-ft air-conditionedtrailers
have been placed on the tank deck, one equipped
as a “sleeper,” one containing a whole-body
counter (shadow-shield lead assembly and electronic equipment), and oneset upfor clinical examinations with a doctor’s office, a small laboratory, and an x-rayfacility. The LCU with these
trailers is now in full use and affords tremendous
improvements in the operations.
Examinationfacilities at Utirik consist of several
Butler-type buildings left by a weather station
group. On Rongelapseveral examinationtrailers
have been installed so that the schoolhouse need
no longer be used. Examinations trailers have also
beeninstalled on Ebeye and Majuro.
Majorevents in the Marshall Islands related to
the surveys, including the political problems of the
past few years, are summarized in Appendix 1.
Before and after each survey, village meetings
have always been held on Rongelap and Utirik to
inform the people of the objectives of the examinatons,the findings, and recommendedtreatments.
Because of the language barrier, the people did
not always understand the need for the examinatons, or their results. Every effort is now being
made to correct this. Preparation of a questionand-answer bookiet on the effects of the fallout
and treatment on the Rongelap and Utirik people
was recommended by the Congress of Micronesia;
such a booklet has been printed at BNL forthe
Trust Territory Health Services andis being distributed; it should do much to correct manyof the
former misconceptions (see Appendix 4).

flux is great: during any given field trip up to 30
people maybearriving or leaving.
The district has opened up to foreign travel.
Mayjurohas a Jet airport, paved roads, electricity,
and telephones. Expectationsare rising, and when
public services fail to keep pace with increasing

During the 20 years covered by these reports

drastic changes have occurred in the Marshall
Islands District.

The population more than doubled from 1948

to 1973, the total going from ~ 10,000 to ~ 25,000.

The increases were most dramatic on Majuro (going from 1,200 to 10,300) and on Ebeye (going
from 750 to 5,000). On the outerislands thetotal
population changedless (Rongelap, 100 to 167;
Utirik, 126 to 217), but the age distribution became abnormal. Young adults have gravitated to-

115 were <15 years old and 30 were >50. The

demand,dissatisfaction is more vocal.

The atmospheric bomb tests ended in 1958.

Kwajalein was abandoned as a Navy Base in 1960

and was made part of the Army’s missile test
range. For the visiting medical teams, loss of Navy
assistance in transportation has increased the
logistic problems, but the continuing supportof
the Army Base has been invaluable.
The people of Rongelap and Utirik have always
been most friendly and cordial to the medical
team. Except for political interference with the
1972 examinations, the people have always been
cooperative.

Il. Initial Findings
A. DOSE ASSESSMENT

The radiation exposure of the Marshallese was

due entirely to fallout, since the detonationsite

was too far awayfor thermal, blast, or direct irra-

diation effects. (In constrast, direct effects were responsible for all the injuries from the atomic bombs
in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, withlittle or no fallout.) The fireball from the 1954 Bravo device,
detonated from a tower, touched the surface of the
earth at Bikini, and large amounts of material
were drawn up and mixed with fission products in

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1. Source

the bomb cloud. Because of an unpredicted shift

in the winds in the upper atmosphere,fallout was
deposited in a cigar-shaped area 20 to 40 miles
wide extending ~200 miles to the east of Bikini
(see Figure 1). The radioactivity was dueto fission
products and some neutron-inducedisotopes; the
fallout containedlittle fissile material. The radiation was therefore almost entirely from gamma
and beta rays of varying energy from numerous
fission radioisotopes. The time after detonation
whenfallout began was estimated as 4 to 6 hr at
Rongelap, ~7 hr at Rongerik, and 22 hr at Utirik

;

re

LCU (landingcraft utility) based and maintained

are left with children and old people. A recent survey on Rongelap showedthat ofits 167 people,

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