Ray:

In addition to the lessening that comes from the "fire dying down" it

is also being washed out of the soil by the rains so that it is not as

available.

It is getting deeper into the soil and finally getting into the

groundwater so that it then disappears.

Marshallese from Wotho:
then.

I would like to further ask another question,

This I am wanting to talk about, soil and plants.

Other foods.

In

1946 there were, the tests began and I assume that some of these
radioactive particles began coming to our atoll, Wotho.

One of our staples

that we really relied on in our diet at Wotho is arrowroot.
plenty of it, that's our staple food.

And we had

So we are now told that these

radioactive materials enter the soil and somehow are active, or affect the

soil.

Ray:

Just how do they affect the soil?

How do they work in the soil?

The radioactive materials do not have a harmful effect on the

productivity of the soil.
Buck:
Ray:

Is that the question?

I believe so.
They do not in any measurable way that we are aware of, affect the

productivity of the soil.

I will continue.

And there is no evidence that

the presence of the radioactive material in the soil affects the health of
a growing plant, damages the plant itself.
Marshallese from Wotho:

In all of the islands that appear on this map of

Wotho we have not any arrowroot at all.

We do not have arrowroot in our

atoll.

And I would like to continue.

a bit.

We do have the stalk, the leaves, but no, no root.

we can, our staple is gone.
arrowroot.

Now, I'd like to just expand on that
Nothing, that

Now the plant is there but we can't eat

Utrik and Likiep have the same conditions.

All the northern,

northeastern, all the northwestern atolls.
deBrum:

The question is, assuming that the radiation is the cause.

NOR ARCHIVES
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