weapons, (2)

predicting the fallout patterns resulting from other

yields and conditions of detonation, (3) evaluating scaling parameters,

(4) evaluating immediate external and internal hazards from fallout from
high yield devices, and (5) evaluating the logistics involved in decontamination procedures. In addition to these basic investigations,
Operation CASTLE results were expected to provide the basis of a

theory for the mechanism of particle formation in the cloud and to sup-

ply data relative to the differences between fallout resulting from

' land and water suvface detonationse
1.3

BACKGROUND

Residual contamination resulting from fallout was initially

observed at Operation TRINITY4/; subsequent atomic tests nave resulted
in residual contamination which was militarily significant for all
types of nuclear detonations except air bursts. Experiments were de-

signed to document the fallout from both the Operation JANGLE 2/ and

Operation IVY 3/ surface shots.

However, the results from these shots

are of limited applicability to the CASTLE tests because the yield of
the JANGLE shot was very small and in desert sand rather than coral
rock, while the main downwind pattern of fallout from IVY Mike shot

went out to sea and was not instrumented. The JANGLE surface shot
demonstrated that a low yield weapon could cause a significant degree
of contamination and definitely established the need for further work
on the contamination problem and associated hazards, especially from
higher yield surface detonations. Operation IVY provided the first
opportunity to investigate the general fallout problem resulting from
the surface land burst of a high yleld nuclear device.
An unanticipated base surge was observed shortly after the CRUSS~

ROADS underwater detonation1/.

It appears that the base surge dis-

tributed some contamination from this shot, although the evidence is

not entirely conclusive. Attempts to study base surge effects have
since been mide at JANGLE and at some high explosive tests. These experiments have not determired whether the base surge is a carrier of
radioactivity. Operation CASTLE provided the first opportunity to
study base surge characteristics from surface water shote

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