d. Blast and displacement.

The 15 dogs placed

in two

communal shelters I400 feetfrom ground zero all survived

the detonation and recovered within a few hours.
Radiation
and thermal effects on the dogs were found to be negligible.
Although some degree of local hemorrhage was found in
heart valves and lungs, the most severe of these lesions
would not have been lethal.
Tests with dummies simulating
the human body suggested that the tossing about of occupants
and objects would have been the greatest hazard in these
shelters.
e. Biomedical studies.

Results of genetic studies

using fly populations,plant materials, and a small number
of mice will be determined after a

amination.

longer period

of ex-

ProjectGABRIEL
12. The Commission has on several occasions examined the
general question of how many atomic weapons

can be detonated

without hazardous long-range and short-range radiation effects
upon man,

animals, and

crops.

When the expansion

program was

considered in 1951 it was tentatively concluded that the proposed
stockpile would not
danger

limit.

contain a

number of weapons approaching this

The Rand Corporation was

examine this conclusion more thoroughly.
calculated a

preliminary sample estimate

selected

in

1952 to

To date Rand has
of

the range

of dis-

tribution of radioactive fall-out which would occur from a 1- to
10- kiloton detonation.

One important consideration

is the

relatively large amount of radioactive debris which may be
brought down by rain from low-level bomb clouds.

In some cases

amore serious radiation hazard may be created by weapons of low
yield then by those of higher yield, because the radtoactive
bomb cloud produced by the latter is carried to higher altitudes

13.

After the basic principles

been established,

the

problem will be

for one

we:

than are normally reached by weather disturbances.
detonation have

to determine

possible

statistical distributions of rain-out resulting from a number
of bombs detonated

in patterns which vary in time and

- 02 -

space.

Part VI

A

Select target paragraph3