INTRODUCTION. Following the detonation of a thermonuclear device at the Pacific Test Site on 1 March 1954, 239 Marshallese people were exposed to significant levels of gamma radiation from fallout. Estimated total exposures ranged from 175r on Rongelap to lir on Utirik (1). These populations were evacuated to Kwajalein for decontamination and care. During the two days of fallout exposure before evacuation was completed, the Marshallese also received some radioactive materials internally by ingestion and ~ inhalation. Estimates of the internal body burden from fallout were obtained from the analysis (1) of urine samples collected soon after exposure. These data indicated that the acute hazard from internally deposited fission fragments was quite small as compared to the whole body gamma radiation exposure. Although the radioactivity levels in the urine were low, the activity was sufficient to obtain reasonable precision and to warrant additional long term studies of the activity levels and excretion patterns of this rather large and well isolated population. The people from Alinginae and Utirik were returned to their home islands in June 1954. Radiation intensities on Rongelap, however, precluded an early return to this atoll and the Rongelap people lived on Majuro from June 1954 until July 1957. Basic data on the food crops of thejarshallese indicated that after resettlement on the contaminated atollsintake of strontium? would be increased considerably, and that cesiun'37, zinc®?, and cobalt©? were dietary constituents of island and ocean foodstuffs, and also would be assimilated (2). The expected increases in the trace amounts of radionuclides in the food supply of a large population would afford an opportunity to investigate the rate of equilibration and the discrimination factors operating between food supply and man. Urinary

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