67

incidence in the exposed Rongelap people than in
the unexposed group and the low-level exposed
Utrk group. Whether or not this is correlated
with radiation exposure cannot beascertained.
The data must be interpreted with considerable

caution since (a) the populations are small, (b) the

unexposed population was not examined before
1957 and has undergone changes dueto both attrition and addition, (c) the diagnosis of malignancy is not certain in all cases because ofthe difficulty of obtaining autopsies for verification, and

(d) the types of malignancy were not those that
have been correlated with radiation exposurein the
Japanese exposed at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.17?

VI. Radiological Monitoring
of Personnel and Environment

to their homeisland in 1957, the low levels of en-

vironmental contamination were soon reflected in
increased body burdens of some radionuclides.7 A
numberof radiological surveys!56-164 at Rongelap
and Utirik have been carried out in conjunction
with personnel monitoring, largely by University
- of Washingtonstaff and morerecently also by a
group from the BNL Health Physics and Safety
Division. These studies have provided important
information on the movementsof radionuclides
from the soil through the marineandplant food
chain to man andshould prove useful in predicting future body-burden patterns of people returning to Bikini and Eniwetok. The principal residual
radioactive elements on Rongelap and Utinik were
137Cs, 90Sr, 65Z7n, and =5Fe, with small but measur-

able amounts of otherfission products and neutron-

“4

Figure 54. Arrangementoflead bricks
used for whole-body counting.

tee.

During their 3-year sojourn on Majuro (19541957), the Rongelap people’s body burdens of
radionuclides decreased rapidly, as shown by
radiochemical analyses of urine. By 6 months
radionuclides in the urine were barely detectable.”
The Utirik people were moved back to their home
island after the initial examinations and were exposed to very low levels of residual radioactivity
there. In 1957 (3 years after the accident) gamma
spectrographic analyses were carried out on 4
Rongelap and 2 Utirik people at Argonne National
Laboratory in Chicago.155 The finding of detectable levels of 137Cs and ©Zn (higherin the Utiriks)
indicated thefeasibility of using this technique in
the islands. When the Rongelap people returned

Figure 53. Steel room used
for whole-body gamma spectroscopy.”

aL Shiketis

A. GENERAL

Select target paragraph3