three-inch, sample. solid crystal. Counting time was 30 minutes per The output data from the 256-channel analyzer were processed by an IBM Model 709 computer. All values were corrected for decay of the radionuclide during the period between the estimated date of catching the fish and the date of counting the sample. The date of catch was. arbitrarily assumed to be the mid-point between the first and last days of fishing for the vessel from which the sample was obtained. "Month of catch" rather than "month of landing" would be another logical way of grouping the data, but the error in estimating the date of catch did not warrant changing the original method of grouping the data as established by Kawabata et al. (1963). In accumulating the data on the radioactivity of the samples three variables were recognized: radionuclide. month of landing, tissue and Species and area were recognized only for special analyses; there was little species difference and segregation by area was unwarranted because of the widely scattered fishing areas and the migratory habits of the fish. first group, The samples in the identified as "May", were from fish caught before the initiation of the 1962 program at Christmas Island and therefore can be considered to be "pretest" samples. The average values for each of seven gamma-emitting radionuclides in four tissues of eviscerated tuna--light muscle, dark

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