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METHOD

1. Plutonium concentration contours (isopleths) will be developed
for each of the northern islands which contain high-concentration regions (Enclosure 3), ‘and any other-northern islands which might be shown during Cleanup
to have high concentrations.
(In general, the confirmatory data obtained
from low-concentration regions will not be sufficient to structure meaningful

_isopleths.)

The isopleths will be computed by the most advanced automatic ~

contouring method available at the time of Cleanup, and comparable to or

exceeding

the SURFACE II program described in Reference 5.

The raw data

“ to be contoured will consist of the Pu concentrations obtained during
Cleanup by laboratory analysis of soil samples collected from within the
areas under investigation. The concentration contours will be used for
_ Yanking areas according to their cleanup requirements, e.g.-~mandatory

“ € >400

pCi/g), negotiable

(between 40-400 pCi/g), or no cleanup ( <40 pCi/g).

. When the area within an isopleth becomes programmed for Cleanup, then the

"goil therein will be removed in successive layers until samples collected

from the residual surface show Pu concentration to be as low as is reasonably
achievable (<40 pCi/g).
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' 2. It is highly probable that a minimum of ten ‘thousand ‘soil,‘samples
will require analysis in order to adequately define the regions deserving soil
cleanup and to verify that all the necessary Pu-contaminated soil has been
removed. Prompt Pu analyses are necessary to expedite Cleanup.
The quantitative assay of soil for Pu at the concentration levels of interest to Cleanup,
however, is laborious by any method. Nuclear radiation detection methods are
essential as the quantity of Pu amounts to only a few parts per trillion by
weight; however, the nuclear methods are made difficult becaus_ Tu is predominantly an alpha emitter. For the most precise nuclear methods, the Pu must

be separated from its soil matrix prior to alpha counting, and that extends the

time per analysis.

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3. To achieve the necessary accuracy, and speed of ‘analysis, ‘the.
Cleanup will have_an
on-site Radiological
Laboratory
ca
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Pu in soil by a combined solvent extraction-liquid scintillation method
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modeled after that of Reference 6. Should
more suitad
aborato.y method 1¢¢".
. become available prior to or duping Cleanup, it would be emp loye it feasible...
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To avoid the possibility that data obtained from the "field lab" is later
er

questioned, an adequate fraction of the on-site analyses will be repeated for

verification ofaccuracyabtheUSAF/McClellan Central Laboratory (USAF/MCL) *<*°
which has an established reputation for performing high-quality radiochemical
analyses of environmental samples.
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4. After decisions have been made that the soil in an area deserves
to be excised, and engineers begin removing the soil, a less accurate analysis
method is suitable to monitor the progress of soil removal if the method

provides "instant" results.

The alpha scintillation counting of soil without

any Pu separation, as reported in Reference 7,

appears to be a relatively fast
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