device.

If the predominant direction of fallout cannot be determined,

then sampling stations should be located in all directions from
ground zero, Such an array should be avoided where possible because

of the large amount of wrk required to maintain the resulting large

number of stations.
Water—based stations should be used at the Pacific Proving

Grounds to provide proper area coverage to document the fallout.
Land stations at the shot atoll do not by themselves provide enough
fallout documentation.

Larger bases, such as barges, should be used where practicable

as instrument platferms in the lagoon rather than the rafts used at
CASTLE. The rafts used at CASTLE were inadequate bases on which to
mount fallout collectors. Seas in the lagoon are generally so rough

that it is difficult for personnel to moor rafts to buoys, transfer

equipment from boats to rafts, and work on the raftse
New types of fallout collectors should be designed to sample
fallout in locations subject to more or less continuous salt water
spray and occasional immersion before and after the instrument has
operated. Present fallout collectors, though adequate to keep

ordinary rains from working parts, are not adequate when mounted on
low rafts at sea stations and at land stations subject to water waves
from close-by nuclear detcnationse

102

Select target paragraph3