The historical background related to the establishment of the Nevada Applied
Ecology Croup (NAEG) is described in the preface of the first NAEG report

entitled "Dynamics of Plutonium in Desert Environments" NVO-142 edited by

Dunaway and White
(1974).
This report states that the Planning Directive
NVO-76 established the NAEG under the Office of Effects Evaluation, whose
responsibility includes the determination and prediction cf effects of
radioactivity on biota, particularly with respect to food chains and other
environmental factors affecting man.
The stated purpose of the NAEG is
" ...to coordinate the ecological, radiation monitoring and other environmental
programs necessary to support continued nuclear testing activities and to
provide the mechanism to effectively comply with the requirements of the

National Environmental Policy Act of 1969..."
An early concern of
ment Administration
for nuclear weapons
handling, transport

the former AFC, currently the Energy Research and Develop(ERDA), and the U.S. military organizations responsible
was for the safety of these devices with respect to storage,
and accidents. This, in turn, ted to a number of experi-

ments désigned to test for "safety against fission reaction."

Basically,

these experiments consisted of detonating a chemical explosive in close
proximity to an assembly of plutonium and/or uranium and were appropriately
called "safety shots."' These tests have resuited in the local distribution
of plutonium and/or uranium at specific sites located at such areas as the
Nevada Test Site (NTS), Tonopah Test Range (TTR) and the Pacific Proving
Grounds.
The wisdom of carrying out these tests was demonstrated by accidents
near Palomares, Spain, Thule Air Force Base, Greenland, and elsewhere.
To date, intensive studies on the transuranium nuclides carried out at specific
“safety shot" areas at the NTS and at the ITR have been a principal function of
the NAEG since its inception. Much of the historical background for these
studies is described in the preface to NVO-76 mentioned previously (Dunaway and
White,
1974).
However, during the past year or so, increasing attention has
been directed toward extending these studies to include areas in the immediate
vicinity of old nuclear test events which were associated with Plowshare cratering tests, surface shots or accidental ventings.

iy

As a result, both large and small animal studies have been incorporated into
this program in the form of field and laboratory studies.
The large animal
studies are carried out by the Environmental Monitoring and Support Laboratory
of the Environmental Protection Agency at Las Vegas (EMSL-LV),
‘These studies
are concerned primarily with the transfer of plutonium and other transuranium
nuclides to man via the food chain, with special emphasis on milk and meat.
The principal animals used in these studies include dairy cattle, dairy goats,
and beef cattle (specifically the NTS range herd}.
The objectives of the
laboratory experiments conducted at EMSL-LV include determining:
(a) the
transport of plutonium and other transuranic elements from orally administered
doses to milk and tissues (or meat products) and the excretion rates of these
materials in urine and feces; (b) the transfer of transuranics to juvenile
animals via in vivo labeled milk; (c) transfer of ingested plutonium and
americium to edible tissues and eggs of domestic fowl.

chem

forms of transuranic elements, as
(d) solubility studies of known chemical
in an artificial rumen-simulated
forage,
on
ls
materia
d
eposite
field-d
well ag
y to the solubility and subsequent
gastrointestinal system which relate directl
In general, the field
absorption of radionuclides in the intact animal.
(a) beef cattle placed to forage on
studies conducted by EMSL-LV involve:
steers used as sample collectors
contaminated rangeland along with fistulated
ous wildlife such as deer, coyotes
for forage, and (b} the collection of indigen
anic nuclides in their tissues.
and jackrabbits for the analysis of transur
on sample collectors have a
The fistulated steers which are used as vegetati
ingested samples can be
surgically placed "window" to the rumen from which
grazing cattle have for local
retrieved in order to determine the preference
to determine
In addition, such rumen samples may aiso be analyzed
vegetation.
radionuclides associated with
the qualitative and quantitative makeup of the
red
Selected animals from the range herd are slaughte
the ingested forage.
examined for abnormal pathology
on a semiannual schedule and their tissues are
1975).
and are analyzed for specific radionuclides (Smith,
s vertebrates have been carried
In ettu ecological studies of stall indigenou

y of Nevada-Las
out by Drs. Bradley and Moor of the Universit
population,
and Moor, 1975). These studies include ecology,
in contaminated
studies of small mammals, birds and reptiles
Tissue samples from these animals are analyzed
and the TTR.
contaminants in
content in order to relate these to existing
especially plutonium and americium.

Vegas (Bradley
and reproduction
areas of the NTS
for radionuclide
the environment,

animal programs indeed develop
Thus it can be seen that the large and small
cal radiation monitoring in both large
ecologi
for
tion
informa
mission
d
require
nce and are a
The domestic animals are of economic importa
and small animals.
the small indigenous vertebrates are
direct link in the food chain to man, and
information is used as input
a part of local ecosystems. Much of the derived
anium radionuclides on man
for modeling the potential impact of the transur
ecosystems.
through food chain transport and on local
to the nuclear testing programs,

transuranic nuclides are also

In addition
via fission reactors and it
produced in the generation of electrical energy
approximately one quarter
century
the
of
end
the
by
that
d
estimate
has been
have been generated, including
of a million tons of radioactive wastes will
Thomas and Perkins
nium elements.
approximately 2 x 10% curies of the transura
this material; for example, they
(1974) have presented an excellent review of
of 242/244cm in nuclear wastes
show that the activities of 241 pyf24lam and
Pu, However,
e greater than
range from two to three orders of magnitud
the ratios of transplutonium
they also mention that it is obvious that
es will be much less than those
elements to 239Pu in nuclear fuels themselv
reprocessing, these wastes could
in the nuclear wastes. During transport oT
in a variety of chemical or physical
ent
environm
the
to
released
ally
accident
be
nics in the environment
The information gained from the study of transura
forms.
It is toward
in such an event.
and food chain of man could be of great benefit
of DBER support, through the
this end that we have also had a certain amount
neptunium in the cow-milk/meat Link
NAEG, to study the transport of curium and

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