* 4 1955 so mach of the debris originated from the Spring 1954 test series (Castle) that one could reasonably essign an origin to the fission products and deal with the ercss activity, if fractionation could be neglected. After 1955, the number of tests were so numerous that almost all samples contained fission products from many tests. The method of estimating individual isotopes from the gross fission product activity and burst assignment was no longer as useful. Aireraft filtering flights reaching into the lower stratosphere have been reported by Stewart et ar(") by Aler, Bjornerstedt, Edvarson and Low in Sweden, and by Hvinden (7) in Norway. (6) All showed significant increases in the long-lived radioactivity of the air with increasing altitude, and a relatively sharp increase at or near the tropopause. The results are shown in Figure 1. tshii'®) | in Japan, employed a technique utilizing balloon-borne Geiger counters to attain altitudes of 50,000 feet, compared to the 40,000 feet attained by the aircraft. However, this technique had the drawback of measuring the total gamma activity in situ, and it was necessary to subtract the cosmic ray contribution based on a knowledge of the mean distribution of cosmic-ray activity with altitude. The two contributions were of about the same order of magnitude in the lower stratosphere. While these flights showed higher concentrations of fission products at the tropopause level, they did not show the sharp gradient at the tropopause or the large differences between the troposphere and stratosphere. IV. Models of Stratospheric Storage and Fallout MN A 6S mes Utilizing the estimates of stratospheric injection, the scanty upperair measurements available and the observations of surface deposition, several estimates of the probable residence time of Sr-90 particles in the stratosphere have been made. Libby! 3) estimates about 10 + 5 years, Stewart et a4) 5-10 years, vachtal?) , about 5 years, and the U.N. Scientific Committee (10) a value of about 8 years with a range of 5-10 years. All of these estimates imply a stratospheric structure at variance with known meteorological principles (this has been recognized by the last two references cited). The concept of an unvarying mean residence time for stratospheric debris would imply uniform mixing in the stratosphere with a semi-permeable membrane at the tropopause and would be independent of the actual altitude 4 2 Sueke ihe ohy tal Loe SCLENCES

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