few rains. These seasonal effects have occurred each

summer and wintercycle.
Autoradiography”

of

part

of

a

sample

of

percolated rainwater taken in winter from the

chamber containing the large pieces of MHFT-12

revealed 0.05- to 0.8-um-diam plutonium oxide par-

ticles with a count median diameter (CMD) of0.095
um. These accounted for only 1 ppm of the total
plutonium in the sample, indicating that nearlyall
the plutonium particles carried through the soil by
water were less than 0.05 um in diameter.

Usually there is good agreement in measured

radioactivities among aliquots from the same per-

colated rainwater sample. Occasionally there is disagreement with one aliquot counting as much as
several hundred timesthe others. This indicates the
presenceofa significantly larger than average particle of PuO.. We estimated that the largest particle
foundin the high activity aliquots was equivalent to
a 4-um-diam sphere, five times the diameter of the
largest particle seen in the autoradiographic

during the first 5 min of rain, in contrast to the ex-

periment with the large pieces. Instead, airborne

plutonium decreased, and after the rain, the concen-

tration was an order of magnitude lower than before.
These lower concentrations probably indicate that
soll wetting inhibited resuspension of plutoniumbearing particles. The counting rates were so low
that we had to combinethefive filters used during

the rain to obtain meaningful statistics. The same

treatment was necessary forthe first five filters used

after the rain. There wasvery little seasonal effect on
the plutonium content of the rainwater that percolated through the soil; it averaged about 0.2 uCi
both winter and summer.
0
i

st

~
ed

|__|

Ps

0

:S ot

_-.-]

0
}|
isk

This concentration did not increase significantly

oo

TABLE V
CONCENTRATIONS OF AIRBORNE PLUTONIUM
DURING RAIN IN AN ENVIRONMENTAL CHAMBER
CONTAINING FINELY DIVIDED 238-PLUTONIUM DIOXIDE
Filter

No.

Collection
Time

__(nin)

Pu
Concentration

(pCi/m*)

1

103

1.9

2

5

2.1

60

1.9

2-7

Remarks
Before
Tain
First 5

min of
rain

Average

during

13

164

0.12

926

0.14

After
rain

3

63

| |

jo

493]
33

1B

8

| |

|

63

of4

tose}

7

7

I

t

_——

+~—

0

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p——J

{

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|

ry

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t

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|

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=

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0

95

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ES

o

6

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in the chamber were also measured using an air
sampler. The results (Table V) show thatthe airborne plutonium concentration before the rain was

about the same as the prerain concentration in the
chambercontaining the larger pieces of MHFT-12.

0

—
0

analyses of a rainwater sample in which the count

rates of the aliquots agreed.
The fine particles of MHFT-12 interacted
differently with the simulated environment. These
particles were too small to have temperatures above
ambient, so spallation was negligible. Plutonium
concentrations in airborne particulates during a rain

!

066

69n0*

fotI
!

po
!
!
7
0

|
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fb

po
67;

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bs

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23

132

35

088

—

als

027

06
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et

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6

7

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7

f=

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pos

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10

40!

Total
a.Sampte to LFE Environmental

.

12

[ow

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lots

71a
bad
eat

a XN

449s

|

ago

[ol

El

54

Core: positions:

as * 6
!

Pu
5

2

4:7

Fig. 2.
238Py in soil cores from chamber containing
fine material from MHFT-12 (ng).

Select target paragraph3