the passage of time has generally made much more difficult, more time-consuming,
and more error-prone than it was during the period shortly after the generation
of the fallout.
In particular, the standard autoradiographic techniques do
not apply anymore:
The principal fission-product activities remaining after
10 or 20 years are the strontium-90--yttrium 90 and cesium-137--barium-137
activities which comprise over 90% of the residual activity. A few percent of
the remaining activity is caused by promethium-147,
These activities are
insufficient for adequate registration, especially since fractionation
of
strontium-90 and cesium-137 is quite severe, such that fallout
from surface
and near-surface bursts ts usually much depleted in these nuclides
relative to
zirconium-95 or promethium-147, or even transuranics.
The fallout itself is,
of course, depleted in the smallest particles.
In fallout from the more
deeply buried cratering shots, the fractionation pattern appears
to be reversed,
however.
This fallout also contains little or no fused material.

REFERENCES

The references listed below constitute only a small portion of the available
literature. They have been chosen primarily to support and to illustrate some
of the statements made in the text.
1.

Adams, C. E., N. H. Farlow, and W. R. Schell.
1958.
"The Composition,
Structures, and Origins of Radioactive Fallout Particles." U.S. Naval
Radiological Defense Laboratory. Report USNRDL-TR-209.
Anspaugh, L. R., P. L.
J. R. Reichman, and J.
Progress Report." In:
Nevada Applied Ecology
(Eds,). NVO-142, pp.

A few methods that have been used for miscellaneous purpose are available
to
provide a concentration, if not a separation, of the desired
particulates:
density separations with or without size separations, alpha~track
and/or
fission-track radiography with particle isolation.
These methods would be
useful to provide at least a partial characterization of the contaminatio
n as
it exists today.
There is some evidence that the transuranics were mostly
concentrated in a small fraction of the fallout particulates, and
although
some changes in the distribution of these nuclides may have taken
place as a
result of weathering, this conclusion is probably still valid.
Thus, a combination of data correlation and well-planned sample analysis will provide
answers
to most or many of the questions that are now being posed.

Phelps, N. C. Kennedy, H. G. Booth, R. W. Goluba,
S. Koval.
1974.
"Resuspension of Plutonium: A
The Dynamics of Plutonium in Desert Envtronmente.
Group Report.
P. B. Dunaway and M. G. White
221-310.

Benson, P. A., and L. Leventhal.

Fallout From Nuclear Weapons Test.
Maryland.

Bjornerstedt, R., and K. Edvarson.

CONCLUSIONS

1s possible,

the effort would be hampered by differences

Prediction System."

.

Proc. Cont. Radioactive

A. W. Klement, Jr.

(Ed.).

1963.

Germantown,

"Physics, Chemistry, and

1966.

“Department of Defense Land Fallout

Defense Atomic Support Agency Reports.

DASA-1800.

Heft, R. A., and W. A. Steele.
1968.
"Procedures for the Systematic
"
Separation and Analysis of Radioactive Particles From Nuclear Detonations.
Lawrence Livermore Laboratory Report. UCRL-50428.
Institute of Paper Chemtstry.
1960.
“A Study of the Filtration and
Permeability Characteristics of IPC-1478 Paper.” Defense Atomic Support
Agency Report. DASA-1168.

in

Larson, K. H., J. W. Neel, and Associates.
1960.
"Summary Statement of
Findings Related to the Distribution, Characteristics, and Biological
Availability of Fallout Debris Originating From Testing Programs at the
Nevada Test Site." University of California at Los Angeles, School of
Medicine, Report. UCLA-438.
10.

Mamuro, T., T. Seiyama, T. Matsunami, A. Fujita, and K. Yoshikawa.
1962.
“Electron Microscope Examination of Highly Radioactive Fallout Particles."
Annual Report. Radiation Center of Osaka Prefecture 3:11.

There is a significant lack of useful data on biological availabilit
y.
The
solubility experiments that were conducted should be very critically
reviewed,
not only with regard to their applicability to biological
avatlability, but
also with regard to their validity.
244

In:

Annual Reviews of Nuclear Science 13:505-534.

Defense Atomic Support Agency.

There exists a rather large body of data describing physical, chemical,
and
radiochemical properties of debris from a number of tests of different
types
and of interest for the characterization of the contamination
of the test
sites. Most of these data remain uncorrelated.
Although a great deal of data

correlation

"Physical Characteristics of

Benson, P. A., M. W. Nathans, A. Amos, and L. Leventhal. 1967. "The
Density of Fallout Particles From Airbursts." Health Physics 13:1331~1335.
Meteorology of Faliout."

methods used, in some cases by the subjectivity of the observers/re
porters.
Furthermore, the objectives of the programs under which data were
acquired
usually did not bear much relation to each other.
After correlations have
been made, some inferences can be made that will be very useful
for understanding
the characteristics of the transuranics-containing particulates.
A more
definitive experimental characterization of these particulates
has become
rather difficult because the identification of Particles of
interest by relatively
simple techniques is virtually impossible as a result of radioactive
decay and
the partial failure by morphological and color criterta.
However, the application of special methods that focus on alpha~emitters still makes
far-reaching
identification possible.

1964.

Single Particles From High-Yield Airburst."

245

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