icted by the United Kingdom y*®-3, by multiplying the mean m all sites for which quarterly » by the meanrainfall throughout 16 average ratio of caesium-137 : is relatively constant, and the 7 has therefore been calculated taking the ratio of caesium-137 : | 1961 and 1-5 since then!®, The s of radioactivity in milk were of the Agricultural Research Laboratory !4-2°, ontium-90 ‘or many years that strontium-90 t of both the ‘direct’ contamina- her forage crops with airborne 2 of strontium-90 through plant e magnitude of these two com- ectively, to the recent rate of ve deposit in the soil. Equations e, therefore, been widely used to tium-90 to calcium in milk to nulative deposit of strontium-90: °F, + paFa Kingdom between 1958 and 1964 are compared with those which would have been expected from the measured deposit of fall-out on the basis of the proportionality factors for equation (1), shown in Table 1, which were derived by a least squares analysis of the results of surveys between 1958 and 1961. The average agreement between calculated and observed values was good (Table 2) but for individual years there were appreciable divergences. The calculated values were too low for years when the lag effect was expected to be greatest because of high fall-out in the previous year (that is, 1960, 1963 and 1964); conversely, the calculated values were too high when the rate of deposition had previously been relatively low. An approximately linear relationship was found between the magnitude of these discrepancies and the extent of fall-out in the second half of the previous year. Only a sraall improvement was obtained when the rate factor in equation (1) was related to the deposition of fall-out in the twelve months ending in June or September instead of to that in the current year. have been shown to provide a g both the averagelevels of con- 1umberof countries and also the Nonetheless, the relationship fall-out and the contamination nore complex than the equation n that the soil factor is constant : penetration of strontium-90 th will reduce its availability to her defect is that the equation ‘act that an appreciable, though diet of cattle consists of stored as year; thus the rate of fall-out » the extent to which the current directly contaminated by aireas this ‘lag’ effect of the rate of due to the absorption by plants 3 lodged in the basal tissues and months without being incorportion (1) from this point of view mM annual ratios of strontium-90 The following equation was, however, found to give a significantly better fit to the data (P < 0-01), the residual standard error being reduced from 16 to 6 per cent: (1) 1 mean ratio of strontium-90 to 7, is the annual deposit of stron4 is the cumulative deposit of ldie of the year (mec./km?*), and © ‘rate’ and ‘soil’ proportionality 2 to calcium observed in milk throughout the United C= pF, + oli + paka (2) where F; is the deposit of strontium-90 in the second half of the previous year (mec./km*) and p is the ‘lag-rate’ factor, the other symbols being defined as in equation (1). Whenthe lag-rate factor was related to the deposit in the whole of the previous year, or in the summer monthsonly, a poorer fit was obtained. Proportionality factors for equation (2), derived by least squares analysis, are shown in Table 1. The levels of strontium-90 in milk calculated on this basis agree closely with those observed in each year (Table 2) and it is evident that equation (2) describes the situation in past years more satisfactorily than equation {1}. The introduction of the lag-rate factor leads to a lower value for the soil factor, and a amaller fraction of strontium90 in milk is thus attributed to absorption from cumulative deposit; it appears from equation (2) that strontium90 from this source was responsible for from 20 to 50 per cent of the contamination of milk in past years (Table Table 1. ESTIMATRS OF PROPORTIONALITY FACTORS FOR THE TRANSFER OF STRONTIUM-90 To MILE IN THE UNITED KINGDOM Equation 1 Equation 2 Rate factor (p,-) (pe. Sr/g Ca per me./km?/year} 0-76* 0-70 Lag-rate factor (pr) (pe. *Sr/g Ca per me./km*in —_ 118 second half of previous year) Soil factor (4g) (pe. "Sr/g Ca per me,/km?) Q-19* Oal * Calculated from survey data for the period 1958 to 1961 (ref. 28}. 4