-4 UCRL-3644 A SUMMARY AND EVALUATION OF THE PROBLEM WITH REFERENCE TO HUMANS OF RADIOACTIVE FALLOUT FROM NUCLEAR DETONATIONS Hardin B. Jones* Donner Laboratory of Biophysics and Medical Physics University of California,. Berkeley, January 14, California 1957 Introduction Nuclear detonations form radioactive isotopes in quantities so enormous that they must be reckoned in terms of many thousands of curies, the equivalent of many pounds of the element radium. A portion of this radioactivity is dispersed into the atmosphere and subsequently falls out upon the land and sea. However, the vastness of the land, air, and water of the earth pro- vides a means of dilution so great that even these large quantities of radioactive materials are soon reduced by distance and time to exceedingly small concentrations of radioactivity. The problem of radioactive fallout in relation to human beings involves the need to know the quantity that becomes a part of human environment, and to know the effect upon man of ionizing radiation from fallout. This summary concerns low-level world-wide fallout. It must be recognized, however, that very intense fallout may be experienced in the vicinity of an atomic detonation. For example; "On March 1, 1954, an experimental thermonuclear device was exploded at the U. S. Atomic Energy Commission's Eniwetok Proving Grounds in the Marshall Islands. Following the detonation, unexpected changes in the wind structure deposited radioactive materials on inhabited atolls and on ships of Joint Task Force 7, which was conducting the tests. Radiation surveys of the areas revealed injurious radiation levels; therefore, evacuation was ordered, and was carried out as quickly as possible with the facilities available to the Task Force. "Although the calculated accumulated doses to the exposed human beings were believed to be well below levels that would produce serious injury or any mortality [267 Marshallese received 14 rto 175 r]... All of the exposed individuals have recovered from the immediate effects [burns, loss of hair, anemia] without serious sequelae. Nevertheless it is planned to evaluate the * With suggestions and critical review gratefully acknowledged to R. Lowry Dobson, John W. Gofman, John H. Lawrence, Burton J. Moyer, William Siri, Curt Stern, 1 and Edward Teller. Quoted from Charles Dunham, A Report on the Marshallese and Americans Accidentally Exposed to Radiation from Fallout and a Discussion of Radiation Injury in the Human Being (United States Atomic Energy Commission, July 1956).

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