Table 3.

Estimated whole-body (gamma) and thyroid doses (rad).
Thyroid dose (incl. gamma),
at exposure age:

Population

Rongelap
Ailingnae
Utirik

No.

65
18
158

Whole-body
dose

175
69
14

<10

810-1800
275-450
60-95

10-18

>18

335-810
190
30-60

335
135
30

estimated average dose of 1000 rads to the thyroids of young children appears

to be low; certainly for two boys who developed thyroid atrophy and myxedema.
The calculated doses are obviously rough estimates.
The incompatibility of
these observed effects with the calculated doses based on !31r must be related
partly to the short-lived iodine isotopes (see refs. 188-192).
However, the
option must be kept open that the actual doses were higher than those estimated and that possibly other radionuclides may have been absorbed by the
bones and contributed to the dose.

B.

Residual Radiation (Accumulated Exposure From Habitation on Rongelap or
Utirik Atoll)
1.

Early Calculations

The subject will be only briefly reviewed here.
More detailed treatment
for earlier estimates can be found in the refs. 1, 13, 18, and 22.

lands,

When the Rongelap and Utirik people returned to live on their home isthese atolls, although considered radiologically safe for habitation,

still had low levels of residual radiation.
Before the Utirik people returned
in July 1954 and the Rongelap people in July 1957, they had largely excreted

the radionuclides initially absorbed at the time of the fallout.

months,

By six

radiochemical analyses of urines of the Rongelap population revealed

barely detectable radioactivity (see Table 2).

A number of radiological surveys on Rongelap and Utirik following the

accident showed low levels of residual gamma radiation and small amounts of
radionuclides in the soil, water, and plant, animal and marine life. The

principal isotopes were 137g, 90s, 6bon. and 55Fe, though very low levels of
several other isotopes were found.
When the people returned, personnel monitoring procedures showed low body burdens of these isotopes absorbed from the

enviroment.

(The short-lived isotopes of iodine had long since died out.)

The major contributing food plants were pandanus and coconut.
The coconut
crab, a food delicacy, had to be banned from the diet for >15 years because

of unacceptable levels of radioactivity. Measurable levels of
°??Fe were found
in the blood of Rongelap people (1,236), but since they were <1/100 of the

maximum permissible body burden,

this was not considered a significant hazard.

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