-3rapidly but during fewer years. but over more years. Other soils give them up more slowly We need vastly more research information on rates of uptake and rates of leaching of different isotopes for different soils, for different crops, and for different seasons. The accumulated observations from many sources show that the rate of clearance of material from the stratosphere is much more complex than Recent data (including stratospheric sampling) originally thought. indicate that the simple exponential expression for the rate at which debris is deposited from the stratosphere does not adequately describe the situation. Since January 1958 the fallout rates of the longer lived products could be better described by quasi-symmetrical peaks characterized by maxima appearing from 1.5 to about 11 months post-detonation and by widths at half maximum varying from 3 to 8 months. Although these time intervals seem to be inversely correlated witn the latitude at which detonations have occurred, the influence of the height reached by the cloud and of the season of year at which tests occur remains to be assessed, In any event, all indications suggest that most of the fission debris injected into the atmosphere during 1958 has already been deposited on the ground except for that fraction pertaining to weapons detonated at high altitude in August 1958. This debris has not yet reached its maximum deposition rate as of March 1, 1960 and seems to account for a sizable fraction of the present radioactivity in the air.* It seems likely, therefore, that some modification of past appraisals and future extrapolations in the matter of radiation dose will be necessary. Most obvious from present information is the expectation that the increase in the skeletal deposition rate of Sr?9 will be considerably less than that postulated in the past, since the present rate of deposition in soil is already comparable to the rate of radloactive decay of the sr70 therein. An attempt to corroborate this prediction from the latest values of sr20 content of milk is beset with the difficulty of estimating the relative contribution of foliar contamination of pastures. Although this effect is believed to be important, evaluation of its ultimate disappearance must await return of the herds to spring pasture. Complicating factors such as leaching and drainage of surface waters in meadows will require *The lively debated question of a seasonal rise in fallout rate in the spring remains undecided at the moment because of this coincidental contribution of the Johnston Island tests.

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