additional time and money, the administrator or person who is actually going
to use the data should decide on the precision required. Furthermore, this
should be decided before the study begins,
In transuranic field studies, the
precision needed to meet objectives may be difficult to define, as, for example,
when a decision regarding cleanup of a contaminated area must be made. Decisions based on highly accurate and precise estimates of contamination levels
are obviously desirable. However, stringent requirements on precision may
increase sampling and analysis costs considerably.
Choice of Measurement Instrumentation and Laboratory Procedures
A variety of measurement methods have been used in transuranic field studies
depending on objectives, budget considerations, variability over space and
time, and other factors. Some examples are field im situ instrument surveys,
aerial surveys, and wet chemistry or Ge(Li) scan analyses on environmental
samples. The choice of instrumentation will also affect our perception of
reality. For example, in situ field gamma counters scan a large amount of
soil relative to a 10-gram aliquot being scanned in the laboratory, Hence,
the variability between adjacent in situ readings may be considerably less
than that between two 10-gram aliquots from the two scanned areas due to an
averaging effect in the field. Each method gives us a different view or
perspective on the contamination as it exists in the field. Care should be
taken so that the most appropriate instrumentation is used to fit the objectives
of the study.
For example, an in situ measurement may be appropriate for
establishing general levels of contamination in soil, but inappropriate for
detailed study of the relationship between soil and vegetation concentrations.
Division of Population Into Sampling Units

Before sampling begins, the population should be divided into sampling units
that do not overlap and which cover the population to be sampled. The samples
actually collected are drawn from this collection of sampling units. As a
simple example, the ground area of a study site might be gridded (conceptually
or on paper) and certain of these grid cells chosen at random from which the
vegetation is collected and analyzed for Pu.
If changes over time are expected
to occur, as, for example, with resuspension measurements, then the sampling
unit might be a unit of space over a specified time period. The totality of
sampling units is called a "frame." Conceptualizing the environment as composed
of distict units that fill up the environment but do not overlap can be helpful
in the design of field studies because it tends to reduce a complex situation
into more manageable distinct sampling units.
Selection of Samples
There are many ways of selecting particular sampling units for collection.
These include simple random, stratified random, or systematic designs, as, for
example, on a grid. The method of choice depends in part on the patterns and
trends that are likely to be present over space (or time).
For example, if
soil is uniformly contaminated in all parts of the study site, then the variance
of the estimated average concentration is likely to be similar for any of the
above-mentioned plans (assuming equal sampling effort).
However, if trends in

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concentration do exist, then either the stratified random or possibly a systematic design is likely to result in a smaller variance estimate. The choice
between stratified random and a systematic grid system depends on the correlation structure between samples’ various distances apart.
If a considerable
amount of data is available, perhaps from a preliminary study, it may be
possible to estimate this correlation structure in order to make an objective
choice between sampling plans. A knowledge of spatial correlation can also be
used to obtain better estimates of averages or totals using an estimation
technique termed Kriging (Davis, 1973, pp. 381-390). This technique is also
mentioned below in connection with sampling for cleanup.

REVIEW OF TRANSURANIC SAMPLING DESIGNS

This review is divided into two parts; studies at nuclear detonation or safetyshot sites where the spatial distribution of the contaminants is of considerable
importance, and ecosystem-type studies where movement of transuranics between
ecosystem components is of primary interest. These two parts are not mutually
exclusive, however, since ecosystem studies are usually an important part of
studies at nuclear (fission) or safety-shot sites.
Local Contamination at Nuclear Detonation or Safety-Shot Sites
Radionuclide contamination at safety-shot and nuclear detonation sites is
generally highest near ground zero (GZ) with the pattern of contamination
determined in part by wind speed and direction at the time of detonation, and
whether the assemblies of Pu were covered by a steel plate, buried in the
soil, etc. Considerable information may be available from in situ instrument
surveys conducted following the shot or prior to the main soil-sampling effort.
These advance surveys may serve to define the general level or spatial distribution of radionuclide concentrations over the area. At safety-shot sites
(studied by the Nevada Applied Ecology Group (NAEG):
see Dunaway and White,
1974; White and Dunaway, 1975, 1976), the FIDLER instrument was used to measure
24lam, which at these sites gives a general idea of the 239>240py present in
surface soil.
Aerial surveys have also been used to estimate spatial distribution.
Examples
here are the gamma surveys for ®°co, 13’cs, and *"lam over the islands of the
Enewetak Atoll (Stuart and Meibaum, 1973), gamma surveys for !37Cs and ?4lam
over the Hanford Reservation in 1973 (Bruns, 1976), and an aerial radiological
survey of the Nevada Test Site (NTS) (EGG, 1972).
(See Burson, 1974, for
recent research progress in airborne surveys.)
In situations where “Am and
239°240py concentrations in the same aliquot are related, surveys for 24!Am
hold promise for estimating the spatial pattern of Pu in soil.
Survey information may in some cases be useful for obtaining at least a rough
estimate of the Pu inventory. To do so requires estimation of a “calibration"
relationship between the in attu or aerial survey readings and Pu concentrations
obtained in soil samples. Gilbert and Eberhardt (1976) evaluated the suitability of estimating Pu in soil aliquots taken from safety-shot sites using

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