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Earlier studies of fallout from nuclear weapon tests disclosed the
biologtcal significance of superficial contamination on plant surfaces
resulting from radioactive airborne particle deposition (Fowler (ed)
1965; Larson et_al. 1966; Romney gt al. 1963; Russell (ed) 1966).
Radioactive materials may reach the tissue of plants in two principal
ways:
First, airborne materials may be deposited upon the above-ground
parts of plants and either adhere to their surfaces or be absorbed.
Second, materials which have entered the soll may be absorbed by roots
along with the nutrients on which plants depend for growth (Russell
fed) 1966). The significance of the root uptake-pathway is governed
largely by the biological availability of each given radionuclide
during its interactions in soil.
Thus, if radioactive materials are
insoluble they will most Likely contaminate plant tissues only
superficlally (Romney et al. 1963; Martin 1965}.
Early studies done by the UCLA groups on vegetation in fallout contaminated areas at the Nevada Test Site indicated that severa! natural
processes influenced the fate and persistence of fallout debris both
from nuclear and non-nuclear contamination events.
The period during
and shortly after particulate deposition was characterized by conditions
of instability largely controlled by wind activity.
Rainfall, snow,
and periods of calm air movement near ground level hastened later
development of a quast-stable condition wherein particulate movement
occurred primarily through processes governing resuspension.
Vegetation
contamination could be prevented or markedly reduced by protective
covering during the unstable and quasi-stable periods after fallout had
been deposited (Rhoads et_al. 1971; Romney et al. 1971).
Measurements
of fallout particles on soil and plant material sampled within downwind fallout patterns showed that a partitioning into different sized
particles normally occurred during initial fallout deposition.
Thus,
the mean particle size generally decreased at greater distances downwind from ground zero (Larson et al. 1966).
More recent studies by the NAEG in aged fallout areas at NTS and
Tonopah Test Range (TTR), where plutonium was dispersed by chemical
explosives, give evidence that this partitioning and patterning has
continued to be reflected in the superficial contamination of the
indigenous vegetation (Romney et al. 1974, 1975, 1976a, 1976b).
The
vegetation-to-soil inventory ratios determined in the various activity
strata within several different fallout Ba terns seem to show that a
greater proportion of the deposited 239-24 Pu source material has moved
onto vegetation at greater distances away from ground zero.
Examples
are given in Table 1.
Inasmuch as the activity entrapped on plant
foliage primarily represents material in the resuspendable particle
size range, the amount of contamination on foliage is less in proportion
to the total amount of faliout activity deposited on soil at points
nearer to ground zero compared to points farther away.
Autoradiographs
of annual plant leaf tissues collected near ground zero at Area 13 in
1976 showed that the activity present on vegetation was still in
discrete particles of suspendable size range nearly 20 years after
fallout had occurred (Wallace, unpudlished data).
239

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