23
Findings.

7

Tit

TTT

MAY 1958 —

(TOTAL 32.540 GPM)
MARCH 1958

v7(TOTAL 1.213 CPM)

L
o

CHANNEL WIDTH 0,020 Mev
!
!

O02

0.4

:

|

O6
8
1,0
Le
1.4
GAMMA RAY ENERGY IN Mev

1.6

18

removal of unnecessary articles from within the
room were ineffective, indicated that the con-

ethph ph

COUNTING RATE / GHANNEL IN CPM

u

Figure 16. Background counting rates
at Rongelap Atoll.

CHANNEL WIDTH 0.20 Mev
\
02

!
'
0,4
06
O08
10
L2
GAMMA RAY ENERGY IN Mev

1.4

16

18

2.0

Figure 17. Rongelap subject +50, May 1958,

total 43,260 cpm above background.

:

(0000 =F

z O00E
4
Zz
=

F

°

ev.

.

S 100e

22 kev

3

|
i

q

?

F CHANNEL WIDTH}
=

1

MAY 1958

9°

¥

—

4

=+

4

ce?

MARCH 1957

3

.

~

Ee

a

z

E

=

2

OE

=3

;

ef

gz

4

FE

2
c

ir

°

0.2

0.4

0.6
08
1.0
2
GAMMA RAY ENERGY IN Mev

14

5901

+
.

a!

Figure 18. Rongelap subject +79. total 66,974 cpm
above background (analysis No. 4).

c

Ee

a
°

Figure 16 compares the background

gamma-ray spectrum of March 1958 with that of
May1958. (A few backgrounddata, plant and
marine specimens, and data on one of the American
subjects had been carried separately and hence
were not lost at sea.) In additionto its being high,
the Mav background showsa peak at 1.6 Mev,
which wasattributed to Ba-La'*®. Except for this
one peak, the background spectrum is essentially
continuous. This, plus the fact that external procedures wereeffective in reducing the background,
whereascleaning the inside of the steel room and

1000

TTT

COUNTING RATE / CHANNEL IN CPM

10000

taminating radioactivity was outside the room.
Figure 17 shows the net gamma-ray spectrum
of a representative Marshallese subject after appropriate correction for analyzer dead time and
subtraction of the background. The Cs'*' and Zn**
peaks are seen to be prominent, and in this case
there is also a net peak at 1.6 Mev which has been
attributed to Ba-La'" and which obscures the K‘*
peak. The latter was not a constant finding, but

even in the spectra without it, the K*" peak was
usually obscured by the high background. It had
been hoped that the spectra could be examinedfor

other peaks, but, since the method of analysis re-

quires the high energy peaks and their associated

Compton scattering spectra to be subtracted out

first, the difficulties introduced by the high background,the 1.6 Mev peak, and the masking of the
K"peak renderthe entire procedure very uncertain. Similar difficulties prevented examination
of the spectrum for possible contributions from
Sr’? bremsstrahlung. If future surveys show the
presence of additional nuclides, the 1958 data may
be re-examined. For the present, however, only

the Cs**? and Zn* values, based on peak heights,
are reported here.
Figure 18 shows the spectrum for another subject in 1958 comparedwith his spectrum in 1957.
Becauseof the narrower channel width used in the

1958 study, the activities are even higherrelative

to the 1957 levels than the graph indicates.
The body content of Cs'** and Zn*® and the

urinary concentrations of Cs'*", Zn®, K'°, and Sr®°

are presented in Table 15. Since the urine specimens were obtained in March, they maynotcorrespondstrictly to the body data obtained in May.
The subjects are divided into groups on the basis
of their island of residence. The data are presented
in this wayrather than on the basis of exposure

Select target paragraph3