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studied and reported on by Taylor (1950), Fosberg (1953), St. John (1949),
and Biddulph (1952).

Dawson (1957) has reported on the algae of Eniwetok

Atoll.
Studies on the distribution of radioactive materials produced by the
atomic tests conducted in the Marshall Islands have been published by the
Laboratory of Radiation Biology, * University of Washington, as research
and development reports for the U. 8S. Atomic Energy Commission.
An atoll may be described as a roughly oval, coralline reef rising
15, 000 feet above the ocean floor.

Within the surrounding reef there is

enclosed a shallow lagoon generally with a maximum depth of about 180
feet.

The lagoon is open to the ocean by one or more passes cutting

through the reef, most of which is awash except at low tides.

Emergent

land consists of low sandy islands with an elevation seven to ten feet

above sea level; elevations as high as twenty feet are rare.
occupy only a small fraction of the total area of an atoll.

The islands

Bikini lagoon

covers 229 square miles (Handbook on the Trust Territory of the Pacific
Islands) and has a dry-land area of two and a third square miles divided
among some thirty-six islands and islets; Eniwetok lagoon covers 388
square miles, has a dry~land area of two and one-fourth square miles,

and forty islands.
These atolls lie in a zone of the northeast trade winds.

Because of

the constancy of direction of the winds, there are distinct differences in

reef form between the windward and leeward sides of the atoll.

The wind-

ward side is generally considered the region of most rapid growth and is
*Formerly the Applied Fisheries Laboratory >

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