Robison: Maybe that is so. to tell for sure. I would have to look back at my specific data But basically Which of course I don’t have with me. what happened is if that if we had a turtle from an area and measured it we used that number. Now, that number varies very little but at another atoll it would be just a little bit different but very close; and so what we did was we averaged all that and would apply that to an atoll where we had nothing and, therefore, they don’t always look exactly alike, but they are very, very similar no matter where you find them. Buck: I just happened to notice that down the line it seems like Mejit ranks a little higher in all of those figures than Likiep. Likiep -is a little higher than Mejit. Robison: I think just an addition on the turtle question, we have sampled enough turtles from around the area we feel we know basically what the concentration problem. is in a turtle and it is very, very low and there is no And we just don’t like to keep taking turtle samples because there aren’t that many. We don’t collect them just to go back and measure them when we feel we know already that the concentration is very low and there is no problem with the turtle. ~: I’d like to clarify one thing, to make sure I heard it correctly. Did someone suggest that male turtles are laying eggs too? (Laughter! Only Roosters!) deBrum: Please correct that. It’s an Ailuk rooster, not a turtle! chance, because of the radiation problem? Ray: Bair: Any (more laughter) Yes, Dr. Bair is ready with the information. It was Phil’s question. In 30,000 people you would expect normally about 6 people to have thyroid cancer. about 6. I don’t remember what number you said. But it is true in the Marshallese, 56 One? It is really in the 239 Marshallese who