moved because of a condition that existed at that time which no longer
exists, and what this table shows, is conditions that exist from 1978 on.
It does not relate to the one incident which occurred on March first in
1954.
Marshallese:

Does this mean that the radioactivity at Utrik has decreased

at a rapider rate than it has at Mejit?
Robison:
Utrik.

Initially there was more activity, short-lived activity, on
And that exposed the people but went away very quickly.

But, the

radiation that is there now is going away at the same rate on both atolls.

Robison:

And, the radionuclide concentrations at Mejit are less than at

Utrik and the doses we estimate for Mejit are Jess than Utrik, although
when you summarize the numbers they come out very close.

But everything we

Measure and predict at Mejit is slightly less than at Utrik.

It is less at

Mejit than at Utrik.

Buck:

So these figures represent for the body those for the actual atoll?

(Background discussion. }
Robison:

But they are close, there's not a big difference, but Metij's a

little bit less than Utrik.

Marshallese:

Ray:

This paper says 75 for Utrik and 100 for Mejit.

We are making a check.

(Robison:
annual?

Well, which one are they looking at, the annual?
Is that what they are looking at?

The maximum

(Further background

discussion. ))
Marshallese:
175 for Utrik?

Was that a typographical error, should it have been, that be

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