The *°U, *°U, 8U, andPy data were omitted primarily to keep the output unclassified. Furthermore, the natural uranium contentof thesoil is about one million times that received from fallout and at least half of the plutonium in Nevada and Utah soils comes from worldwide fallout.? Surface roughnesseffects are simulated by using Beck’s values* of (mR/h)/(uCi/m’) for a relaxation length of 0.16 g/cm’. According to Beck, the concentration of fallout varies exponentially with soil depth, Z, accordingto therelation C = C,e~*“. He defines relaxation length as 1/a. Fractionation effects were simulated by the removal ofa fraction ofthe refractory nuclides from the calculation. In general, air drops were assumed to be unfractionated, surface and cratering Events were assumedto have0.4 of the refractory elements present, and all other Events were assumedto have0.5 of the refractory elements present. Each Appendix contains 11 pagesof calculated results relating to one Event in Table 1. Each set of 11 pages is marked Page 2 through Page 12 at the top and A2 through A1l2 (or B2 through B12, etc.) at the bottom. Page 2 of each set gives the external gamma-ray exposure rates and associated values oftotal microcuries per square meter at 30 decay intervals and at zero time. Note that the totals at zero time include only the nuclides listed in Pages 3 through 12,not all the nuclides present at zero time. Calculated values for each radionuclide at various decay intervals are given in the remaining pages—from 1 to 21 hin Pages 3-7, from 1 to 300d in Page 8-11, and from 1 to 50 y in Page 12. Unless otherwise indicated, the value for each nuclide at zero time is the result of a radiochemical measurement. The measurements were performed on debris samples taken by aircraft approximately 1 to 4h after detonation. The production of nuclides designated by (*) has been estimated. When no estimate could be made, the value appears as zero. REFERENCES 1. 2. 3. 4, Announced United States Nuclear Tests, July, 1945, through December, 1980, Office of Public Affairs, Nevada Operations Office, Department of Energy, Las Vegas, NV, NVO-209, Rev. 1, January 1981. H.G. Hicks, Calculation of the Concentration of Any Radionuclide Deposited on the Ground by Fallout from' a Nuclear Detonation, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Livermore, CA, Preprint UCRL-86177 (1981). Accepted for publication in Health Physics. E. Hardy, Plutonium in Soil Northeast of the Nevada Test Site, Environmental Measurements Laboratory, Department of Energy, New York, NY, HASL-306, pg. 1-51, July 1, 1976, H.L. Beck, Exposure Rate Conversion Factors for Radionuclides Deposited on the Ground, Environmental Measurements Laboratory, Department of Energy, New York, NY, EML-387, July, 1980. DPH/cc